RESUMO
The Sulfo-NHS ester is a mainstay reagent for facilitating amide bond formation between carboxylic acids and amine functionalities in water. However, the preparation of Sulfo-NHS esters currently requires hydrophobic carboxylic acids, which are poorly water-soluble, to first be reacted with the N-hydroxysulfosuccinimide sodium salt, which is insoluble in organic solvents. The mutually incompatible solvation requirements thus complicate the synthesis of Sulfo-NHS esters. As a simple, rapid, and cost-effective solution to this problem, we report that the use of 15-crown-5 to complex the sodium cation of N-hydroxysulfosuccinimide sodium salt circumnavigates these solvation incompatibility issues by rendering the N-hydroxysulfosuccinimide salt soluble in organic solvents, resulting in a cleaner esterification reaction and thus improved yields of activated ester product. We also demonstrate that the resultant "crowned" Sulfo-NHS-ester remains water-soluble and is no less reactive than its classic "uncrowned" Sulfo-NHS counterpart when used in bioconjugation reactions between protein amine-functionalities and hydrophobic carboxylic acids.
Assuntos
Éteres de Coroa , Ésteres , Succinimidas , Água , Solubilidade , Solventes/química , Proteínas , Aminas , SódioRESUMO
Aryl diazonium cations are versatile bioconjugation reagents due to their reactivity towards electron-rich aryl residues and secondary amines, but historically their usage has been hampered by both their short lifespan in aqueous solution and the harsh conditions required to generate them inâ situ. Triazabutadienes address many of these issues as they are stable enough to endure multiple-step chemical syntheses and can persist for several hours in aqueous solution, yet upon UV-exposure rapidly release aryl diazonium cations under biologically-relevant conditions. This paper describes the synthesis of a novel maleimide-functionalized triazabutadiene suitable for site-selectively installing aryl diazonium cations into proteins at neutral pH; we show reaction with this molecule and a surface-cysteine of a thiol disulfide oxidoreductase. Through photoactivation of the site-selectively installed triazabutadiene motifs, we generate aryl diazonium functionality, which we further derivatize via azo-bond formation to electron-rich aryl species, showcasing the potential utility of this strategy for the generation of photoswitches or protein-drug conjugates.
Assuntos
Proteínas de Membrana , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , MaleimidasRESUMO
Alternating current (AC) voltammetric techniques are experimentally powerful as they enable Faradaic current to be isolated from non-Faradaic contributions. Finding the best global fit between experimental voltammetric data and simulations based on reaction models requires searching a substantial parameter space at high resolution. In this paper, we estimate parameters from purely sinusoidal voltammetry (PSV) experiments, investigating the redox reactions of a surface-confined ferrocene derivative. The advantage of PSV is that a complete experiment can be simulated relatively rapidly, compared to other AC voltammetric techniques. In one example involving thermodynamic dispersion, a PSV parameter inference effort requiring 7,500,000 simulations was completed in 7 h, whereas the same process for our previously used technique, ramped Fourier transform AC voltammetry (ramped FTACV), would have taken 4 days. Using both synthetic and experimental data with a surface confined diazonium substituted ferrocene derivative, it is shown that the PSV technique can be used to recover the key chemical and physical parameters. By applying techniques from Bayesian inference and Markov chain Monte Carlo methods, the confidence, distribution, and degree of correlation of the recovered parameters was visualized and quantified.
RESUMO
The immobilization of redox proteins or enzymes onto conductive surfaces has application in the analysis of biological processes, the fabrication of biosensors, and in the development of green technologies and biochemical synthetic approaches. This review evaluates the methods through which redox proteins can be attached to electrode surfaces in a "wired" configuration, that is, one that facilitates direct electron transfer. The feasibility of simple electroactive adsorption onto a range of electrode surfaces is illustrated, with a highlight on the recent advances that have been achieved in biotechnological device construction using carbon materials and metal oxides. The covalent crosslinking strategies commonly used for the modification and biofunctionalization of electrode surfaces are also evaluated. Recent innovations in harnessing chemical biology methods for electrically wiring redox biology to surfaces are emphasized.
RESUMO
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men in the UK with over 50 000 new cases diagnosed each year and although therapeutic advances in surgery, anti-androgens, radio- and chemotherapy have increased survival rates, there still remains a need for new treatments to combat the most aggressive forms of the disease. Gene therapy offers promise as an alternative approach but is reliant on selective targeting to the cancer cell surface. Herein we describe the novel construction of a prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) binding bioconjugate-polyplex, based on a glutamate-urea peptide scaffold using 'click' chemistry, which we demonstrate is capable of targeted delivery of a GFP gene to PSMA overexpressing prostate cancer cells, and therefore may have potential future application as part of a prostate cancer gene delivery therapy.
RESUMO
Biofilm formation is integral to the pathogenesis of numerous adherent bacteria and contributes to antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The rising threat of AMR means the need to develop novel nonbactericidal antiadhesion approaches against such bacteria is more urgent than ever. Both adherent-invasive Escherichia coli (AIEC, implicated in inflammatory bowel disease) and uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC, responsible for â¼80% of urinary tract infections) adhere to terminal mannose sugars on epithelial glycoproteins through the FimH adhesin on their type 1 pilus. Although mannose-based inhibitors have previously been explored to inhibit binding of adherent bacteria to epithelial cells, this approach has been limited by monovalent carbohydrate-protein interactions. Herein, we pioneer a novel approach to this problem through the preparation of colicin E9 bioconjugates that bind to the abundant BtuB receptor in the outer membrane of bacteria, which enables multivalent presentation of functional motifs on the cell surface. We show these bioconjugates label the surface of live E. coli and furthermore demonstrate that mannose-presenting "glyco-colicins" induce E. coli aggregation, thereby using the bacteria, itself, as a multivalent platform for mannose display, which triggers binding to adjacent FimH-presenting bacteria.
RESUMO
Novel methods to construct small molecule-protein bioconjugates are integral to the development of new biomedicines for a variety of diseases. C-C linked bioconjugates are increasingly desirable in this application due to their in vivo stability and can be accessed through cross aldol bioconjugation of reactive α-oxo aldehyde handles easily introduced at the N-terminus of proteins by periodate oxidation. We previously developed an organocatalyst-mediated protein aldol ligation (OPAL) for chemical modification of these reactive aldehydes, but the efficiency of this method was limited when a proline residue was directly adjacent to the N-terminus due to intramolecular hemiaminal formation. Herein we explore the competition between this cyclisation and the OPAL modification and demonstrate bioconjugation can be favoured through use of acidic pH for both oxidation and OPAL, and optimisation of reaction conditions and organocatalyst. We then showcase the utility of this acidic-OPAL in modification of the cholera toxin B-subunit (CTB), a homo-pentameric protein of biomedical promise.
RESUMO
Truncated thioester N,S-diacetylcysteamine (SNAc) was utilised as a co-factor mimic for PseH, an acetyl-coA dependent aminoglycoside N-acetyltransferase, in the biosynthesis of the bacterial sugar, pseudaminic acid. Additionally, an azido-SNAc analogue was used to smuggle N7-azide functionality into the pseudaminic acid backbone, facilitating its use as a reporter of pseudaminyltransferase activity.
Assuntos
Glicosiltransferases , Açúcares Ácidos , Próteses e ImplantesRESUMO
α-Formylglycine (fGly) is a rare residue located in the active site of sulfatases and serves as a precursor to pharmaceutically relevant motifs. The installation of fGly motifs into peptides is currently challenging due to degradation under the acidic and nucleophile-rich conditions accompanying resin cleavage during solid-phase peptide synthesis. We report the synthesis of acid- and nucleophile-tolerant α-formylglycine building blocks from vitamin C and use them to prepare callyaerin A, a macrocyclic peptide containing an fGly-derived motif.
Assuntos
Alanina , Técnicas de Síntese em Fase Sólida , Alanina/química , Glicina/química , Sulfatases/química , Sulfatases/metabolismo , Peptídeos/químicaRESUMO
Protein N-termini provide uniquely reactive motifs for single site protein modification. Though a number of reactions have been developed to target this site, the selectivity, generality, and stability of the conjugates formed has not been studied. We have therefore undertaken a comprehensive comparative study of the most promising methods for N-terminal protein modification, and find that there is no 'one size fits all' approach, necessitating reagent screening for a particular protein or application. Moreover, we observed limited stability in all cases, leading to a need for continued innovation and development in the bioconjugation field.