In vivo phage display: Identification of organ-specific peptides using deep sequencing and differential profiling across tissues

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Abstract

In vivo phage display is widely used for identification of organ-or disease-specific homing peptides. However, the current in vivo phage biopanning approaches fail to assess biodistribution of specific peptide phages across tissues during the screen, thus necessitating laborious and time-consuming post-screening validation studies on individual peptide phages. Here, we adopted bioinformatics tools used for RNA sequencing for analysis of high-throughput sequencing (HTS) data to estimate the representation of individual peptides during biopanning in vivo. The data from in vivo phage screen were analyzed using differential binding-relative representation of each peptide in the target organ versus in a panel of control organs. Application of this approach in a model study using low-diversity peptide T7 phage library with spiked-in brain homing phage demonstrated brain-specific differential binding of brain homing phage and resulted in identification of novel lung- A nd brain-specific homing peptides. Our study provides a broadly applicable approach to streamline in vivo peptide phage biopanning and to increase its reproducibility and success rate.

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Pleiko, K., Põšnograjeva, K., Haugas, M., Paiste, P., Tobi, A., Kurm, K., … Teesalu, T. (2021). In vivo phage display: Identification of organ-specific peptides using deep sequencing and differential profiling across tissues. Nucleic Acids Research, 49(7), E38–E38. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkaa1279

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