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Designing Cell Delivery Peptides and SARS-CoV-2-Targeting Small Interfering RNAs: A Comprehensive Bioinformatics Study with Generative Adversarial Network-Based Peptide Design and Assays.

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Abstract

Nucleic acid technologies with designed intracellular delivery systems are some of the most promising therapies of the future. Small interfering (si)RNAs inhibit gene expression and protein synthesis and may complement current vaccines with faster design and production. Although successful delivery remains an issue, delivery peptides may help to fill this gap. Here, we address this issue by applying bioinformatic approaches to design new putative cell delivery peptides and siRNAs for COVID-19 variants and other related viral diseases. Of the 29,880 RNA sequences analyzed, 62 were identified in silico as able to target the virus mRNA sequence, and from the 9,984 peptide sequences analyzed, 10 were selected as delivery peptides. From the latter, we further performed in vitro studies of the two best-ranked peptides and compared them with the broadly used TAT delivery peptide. One of them, seq5, displayed better internalization results with about double intensity signal compared to TAT after a 1 h incubation time in GFP-HeLa cells. This peptide has, thus, the features of a delivery peptide and could be used for cargo intracellular delivery.

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