Isolation of specific peptides that home to dorsal root ganglion neurons in mice

J Oi, T Terashima, H Kojima, M Fujimiya, K Maeda… - Neuroscience …, 2008 - Elsevier
J Oi, T Terashima, H Kojima, M Fujimiya, K Maeda, R Arai, L Chan, H Yasuda, A Kashiwagi…
Neuroscience letters, 2008Elsevier
We isolated peptides that home to mouse dorsal root ganglion (DRG) from a phage library
expressing random 7-mer peptides fused to a minor coat protein (pIII) of the M13 phage. An
in vitro biopanning procedure yielded 113 phage plaques after five cycles of enrichment by
incubation with isolated DRG neurons and two cycles of subtraction by exposure to
irrelevant cell lines. Analyses of the sequences of this collection identified three peptide
clones that occurred repeatedly during the biopanning procedure. Phage-antibody staining …
We isolated peptides that home to mouse dorsal root ganglion (DRG) from a phage library expressing random 7-mer peptides fused to a minor coat protein (pIII) of the M13 phage. An in vitro biopanning procedure yielded 113 phage plaques after five cycles of enrichment by incubation with isolated DRG neurons and two cycles of subtraction by exposure to irrelevant cell lines. Analyses of the sequences of this collection identified three peptide clones that occurred repeatedly during the biopanning procedure. Phage-antibody staining revealed that the three peptides bound to DRG neurons of different sizes. To determine if the peptides would recognize neuronal cells in vivo, we injected individual GST-peptide-fusion proteins into the subarachnoid space of mice and observed the appearance of immunoreactive GST in the cytosol of DRG neurons with a similar size distribution as that observed in vitro, indicating that the GST-peptide-fusion proteins were recognized and taken up by different DRG neurons in vivo. The identification of homing peptide sequences provides a powerful tool for future studies on DRG neuronal function in vitro and in vivo, and opens up the possibility of neuron-specific drug and gene delivery in the treatment of diseases affecting DRG neurons.
Elsevier