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  • Peptide-Drug Conjugates (PDCs): A Deep-Dive Guide to Peptide-Guided Targeted Therapy Beyond ADCs

      Peptide-Drug Conjugates (PDCs) are targeted therapeutics that chemically link a biologically active drug (“payload”) to a peptide that guides the payload toward a specific receptor, microenvironment, or cellular compartment. Conceptually, PDCs resemble Antibody–Drug Conjugates (ADCs), but replace the antibody with a peptide, aiming to keep targeting precision while improving tissue penetration, manufacturing accessibility, and design flexibility.  1) What Exactly Is a PDC (and Why It Matters)?   A typical PDC is built from three modular parts: Targeting peptide (the “homing” component) Linker (the chemical bridge that controls stability and payload release) Payload (cytotoxic drug, radionuclide, or other potent therapeutic)   This modular architecture allows researchers to tune the PDC for: circulation stability, selective tissue uptake, cellular internalization, controlled release, and overall safety profile.  Why it matters: modern drug discovery increasingly values precision delivery—getting more active agent to diseased tissue while reducing exposure to healthy tissue. PDCs are one of the main “next-generation” strategies being explored to push this idea further.  2) PDCs vs ADCs: Same Strategy, Different Vehicle   Both PDCs and ADCs aim to deliver potent therapeutics using a targeting moiety + a linker + a payload. The difference is the targeting “vehicle”: ADCs: antibody-based targeting (large proteins)…

    2025-12-06