RESUMO
The ability to chemically alter proteins is important for broad areas of chemical biology, biophysics, and medicine. Chemical catalysts for protein modification, and particularly rhodium(II) conjugates, represent an important new approach to protein modification that develops novel functionalization approaches while shedding light on the development of selective chemistries in complex environments. Here, we elucidate the reaction parameters that allow selective catalysis and even discrimination among highly similar proteins. Furthermore, we show that quantifying modification allows the measurement of competitive ligand affinity, permitting straightforward measurement of protein-peptide interactions and inhibitors thereof. Taken as a whole, rhodium(II) conjugates replicate many features of enzymes in an entirely chemical construct.
Assuntos
Peptídeos/química , Proteínas/química , Ródio/química , Alcinos/química , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Compostos Azo/química , Biotina/química , Catálise , Humanos , Proteína Tirosina Quinase p56(lck) Linfócito-Específica/química , Modelos Moleculares , Espectrometria de Massas por Ionização e Dessorção a Laser Assistida por Matriz , Domínios de Homologia de srcRESUMO
Rhodium(ii)-fluorophore conjugates have strong rhodium-based fluorescence quenching that can be harnessed to report on a conjugate's cellular uptake and the intracellular decomposition rate. Information gleened from this study allowed the design of an improved STAT3 metalloinhibitor.
RESUMO
Src-family kinases (SFKs) play important roles in human biology and are key drug targets as well. However, achieving selective inhibition of individual Src-family kinases is challenging due to the high similarity within the protein family. We describe rhodium(ii) conjugates that deliver both potent and selective inhibition of Src-family SH3 domains. Rhodium(ii) conjugates offer dramatic affinity enhancements due to interactions with specific and unique Lewis-basic histidine residues near the SH3 binding interface, allowing predictable, structure-guided inhibition of SH3 targets that are recalcitrant to traditional inhibitors. In one example, a simple metallopeptide binds the Lyn SH3 domain with 6 nM affinity and exhibits functional activation of Lyn kinase under biologically relevant concentrations (EC50 â¼ 200 nM).