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Fluorine teams up with water to restore inhibitor activity to mutant BPTI.

Shijie YeBernhard LollAllison Ann BergerUlrike MülowClaudia AlingsMarkus Christian WahlBeate Koksch
Published in: Chemical science (2015)
Introducing fluorine into molecules has a wide range of effects on their physicochemical properties, often desirable but in most cases unpredictable. The fluorine atom imparts the C-F bond with low polarizability and high polarity, and significantly affects the behavior of neighboring functional groups, in a covalent or noncovalent manner. Here, we report that fluorine, present in the form of a single fluoroalkyl amino acid side chain in the P1 position of the well-characterized serine-protease inhibitor BPTI, can fully restore inhibitor activity to a mutant that contains the corresponding hydrocarbon side chain at the same site. High resolution crystal structures were obtained for four BPTI variants in complex with bovine β-trypsin, revealing changes in the stoichiometry and dynamics of water molecules in the S1 subsite. These results demonstrate that the introduction of fluorine into a protein environment can result in "chemical complementation" that has a significantly favorable impact on protein-protein interactions.
Keyphrases
  • positron emission tomography
  • pet imaging
  • amino acid
  • computed tomography
  • high resolution
  • copy number
  • mass spectrometry
  • molecular dynamics
  • pet ct
  • wild type
  • gene expression