Understanding β-strand mediated protein-protein interactions: tuning binding behaviour of intrinsically disordered sequences by backbone modification.
Emma E CawoodEmily BakerThomas A EdwardsDerek N WoolfsonTheodoros K KaramanosAndrew J WilsonPublished in: Chemical science (2024)
A significant challenge in chemical biology is to understand and modulate protein-protein interactions (PPIs). Given that many PPIs involve a folded protein domain and a peptide sequence that is intrinsically disordered in isolation, peptides represent powerful tools to understand PPIs. Using the interaction between small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) and SUMO-interacting motifs (SIMs), here we show that N -methylation of the peptide backbone can effectively restrict accessible peptide conformations, predisposing them for protein recognition. Backbone N -methylation in appropriate locations results in faster target binding, and thus higher affinity, as shown by relaxation-based NMR experiments and computational analysis. We show that such higher affinities occur as a consequence of an increase in the energy of the unbound state, and a reduction in the entropic contribution to the binding and activation energies. Thus, backbone N -methylation may represent a useful modification within the peptidomimetic toolbox to probe β-strand mediated interactions.