Login / Signup

Traceless Click-Assisted Native Chemical Ligation Enabled by Protecting Dibenzocyclooctyne from Acid-Mediated Rearrangement with Copper(I).

Patrick W EricksonJames M FulcherPaul SpaltensteinMichael S Kay
Published in: Bioconjugate chemistry (2021)
The scope of proteins accessible to total chemical synthesis via native chemical ligation (NCL) is often limited by slow ligation kinetics. Here we describe Click-Assisted NCL (CAN), in which peptides are incorporated with traceless "helping hand" lysine linkers that enable addition of dibenzocyclooctyne (DBCO) and azide handles. The resulting strain-promoted alkyne-azide cycloaddition (SPAAC) increases their effective concentration to greatly accelerate ligations. We demonstrate that copper(I) protects DBCO from acid-mediated rearrangement during acidic peptide cleavage, enabling direct production of DBCO synthetic peptides. Excitingly, triazole-linked model peptides ligated rapidly and accumulated little side product due to the fast reaction time. Using the E. coli ribosomal subunit L32 as a model protein, we further demonstrate that SPAAC, ligation, desulfurization, and linker cleavage steps can be performed in one pot. CAN is a useful method for overcoming challenging ligations involving sterically hindered junctions. Additionally, CAN is anticipated to be an important stepping stone toward a multisegment, one-pot, templated ligation system.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • escherichia coli
  • dna binding
  • single molecule
  • transcription factor