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Automated Fmoc-based solid-phase synthesis of peptide thioesters with self-purification effect and application in the construction of immobilized SH3 domains.
Mende, Franziska; Beisswenger, Michael; Seitz, Oliver.
Affiliation
  • Mende F; Institut für Chemie, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Brook-Taylor-Strasse 2, D-12489 Berlin, Germany.
J Am Chem Soc ; 132(32): 11110-8, 2010 Aug 18.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20662535
Peptide thioesters are important building blocks in the total synthesis of proteins and protein domains via fragment ligation. However, synthetic access of peptide thioesters still is a bottleneck of this powerful ligation chemistry. The commonly used methods for the Fmoc-based synthesis of peptide thioesters involve nonautomated solution steps that have to be performed after the solid-phase assembly of the peptide. Usually, HPLC purification is required. Herein, a method that enables crude peptides to be used in divergent native chemical ligations reactions is described. We present an Fmoc-based solid-phase synthesis of peptide thioesters with self-purification which facilitates access to these important building blocks, since the often cumbersome HPLC purification can be avoided. Fmoc-protected amino acids are coupled on a safety catch sulfonamide resin. The self-purifying effect is achieved through the combination of (a) N-terminal coupling of a cleavable cyclization linker and subsequent backbone-to-side chain cyclization, (b) activation of the sulfonamide linkage by alkylation, (c) thiolysis for the selective detachment of truncation products, and (d) TFA cleavage for the liberation of the desired peptide thioester in unprotected form. We have previously shown a method wherein cyclization was performed after carboxymethylation of the sulfonamide. However, the automation of this method was difficult and side reactions at methionine residues hampered the general applicability. The new design involves peptide synthesis on a modified carboxy-functionalized sulfonamide linker, a substantially milder activation of the sulfonamide bond and the use of monomethoxytrityl as well as 2-phenyl-isopropyl protecting groups. This approach solved the problems with methionine containing peptides and enabled the complete automation of the self-purifying synthesis of peptide thioesters. The study also addressed problems in the synthesis of difficult peptides. Aggregated truncation products can resist extraction and contaminate full-length thioesters obtained after TFA cleavage. It is shown that significant enhancements of the purity were achieved when mild acidic extractions were included in the wash protocols after thiolysis. The potential of the method was demonstrated in the parallel synthesis of 20-40 amino acid long peptide thioesters, which were obtained in excellent purities. The thioesters and cysteinyl peptides were used without purification in the assembly of immobilized SH3 protein domains of SHO1 in yeast. A cysteine scan by native chemical ligation suggested single amino acid to cysteine substitutions that (a) confer useful ligation yields, (b) support correct folding, and (c) sustain the function of the folded protein domain. The chemical synthesis of the SH3-domain of SHO1 succeeded in highest yields when cysteine placements at positions S23, F24, and E36 were avoided. The synthetic SH3 mutants were examined in a binding assay, which indicated that N27C, L30C, and D34C mutations provide functional SH3-domain.
Subject(s)

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Peptides / Sulfhydryl Compounds / Src Homology Domains / Immobilized Proteins / Fluorenes Language: En Journal: J Am Chem Soc Year: 2010 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Germany Country of publication: United States

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Peptides / Sulfhydryl Compounds / Src Homology Domains / Immobilized Proteins / Fluorenes Language: En Journal: J Am Chem Soc Year: 2010 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Germany Country of publication: United States