Gold-promoted biocompatible selenium arylation of small molecules, peptides and proteins.
Douglas H NakahataIoannis KanavosMaria Zubiria-UlaciaAlex InagueLuca SalassaRyszard LobinskiProf Sayuri MiyamotoJon Mattin MatxainLuisa RongaRaphael E F de PaivaPublished in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2024)
A low pKa (5.2), high polarizable volume (3.8 Å), and proneness to oxidation under ambient conditions make selenocysteine (Sec, U) a unique, natural reactive handle present in most organisms across all domains of life. Sec modification still has untapped potential for site-selective protein modification and probing. Herein we demonstrate the use of a cyclometalated gold(III) compound, [Au(bnpy)Cl 2 ], in the arylation of diselenides of biological significance, with a scope covering small molecule models, peptides, and proteins using a combination of multinuclear NMR (including 77 Se NMR), and LC-MS. Diphenyl diselenide (Ph-Se) 2 and selenocystine, (Sec) 2 , were used for reaction optimization. This approach allowed us to demonstrate that an excess of diselenide (Au/Se-Se) and an increasing water percentage in the reaction media enhance both the conversion and kinetics of the C-Se coupling reaction, a combination that makes the reaction biocompatible. The C-Se coupling reaction was also shown to happen for the diselenide analogue of the cyclic peptide vasopressin ((Se-Se)-AVP), and the Bos taurus glutathione peroxidase (GPx1) enzyme in ammonium acetate (2 mM, pH=7.0). The reaction mechanism, studied by DFT revealed a redox-based mechanism where the C-Se coupling is enabled by the reductive elimination of the cyclometalated Au(III) species into Au(I).