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Lipopeptides

Product Details

A lipid molecule is added to a peptide sequence during lipidation, a peptide modification process. Since lipopeptide in skin care can be used instead of potentially harmful adjuvants while still eliciting a thorough immune response, they are particularly interesting for vaccine development. Because synthetic peptides by themselves are insufficient to elicit an immune response, immunoadjuvants are frequently used to strengthen the reaction. In the development of peptide vaccines, alternatives to the traditional Freund's adjuvants have met with some success. These include conjugations to viral and bacterial carrier proteins, immunostimulating complexes, and branching multiple antigenic peptides (MAPS).

After Hopp and colleagues discovered in the early 1980s that a peptide conjugated to a dipalmityl-lysine moiety increased anti-hepatitis surface antigen response, lipopeptides were initially used in vaccine development.[1] This result is explained by the fact that, despite the possibility of short peptides containing cytotoxic T cells (CTL) that bind to MHC class I molecules, they are unable to prime CD8+ T-cell responses in vivo. This was further supported by Rammensee and colleagues, who demonstrated in the early 1990s that an influenza lipopeptide (without the need for an adjuvant) evoked CTL responses but the comparable peptide without lipid conjugation did not.

Myristic acid, palmitoyl, dipalmitoyl, geranyl, farnesyl, geranylgeranyl, and other lipids are only a few of the lipids that may be linked to nearly any peptide sequence by CPC due to its significant experience and knowledge in the synthesis of peptides containing lipid moieties.

Common Lipid Abbreviations

ABBREV.

FULL NAME

IUPAC NAME

PAL

Palmitic acid

Hexadecanoic acid

MYR

Myristic acid

Tetradecanoic acid

GER

Geranyl group

(2E)-3,7-dimethylocta-2,6-dien-1-yl

FAR

Farnesyl group

(2E,6E)-3,7,11-trimethyldodeca-2,6,10-trien-1-yl

GGER

Geranylgeranyl group

(2E,4E,6E)-3,5,7,11-Tetramethyldodeca-2,4,6,10-tetraene-1-yl

References

Hopp, Thomas P. “Immunogenicity of a synthetic HBsAg peptide: enhancement by conjugation to a fatty acid carrier.” Molecular Immunology 21, no. 1 (1984): 13-16.

There are many peptide manufacturing companies, but we are one of the best choices for you.

Chinese Peptide Company

No. 69, 12 Street, Qiantang District

China

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