Genetically Encoded 2-Aryl-5-carboxytetrazoles for Site-Selective Protein Photo-Cross-Linking.
Yulin TianMarco Paolo JacintoYu ZengZhipeng YuJun QuWenshe Ray LiuQing LinPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
The genetically encoded photo-cross-linkers promise to offer a temporally controlled tool to map transient and dynamic protein-protein interaction complexes in living cells. Here we report the synthesis of a panel of 2-aryl-5-carboxytetrazole-lysine analogs (ACTKs) and their site-specific incorporation into proteins via amber codon suppression in Escherichia coli and mammalian cells. Among five ACTKs investigated, N-methylpyrroletetrazole-lysine (mPyTK) was found to give robust and site-selective photo-cross-linking reactivity in E. coli when placed at an appropriate site at the protein interaction interface. A comparison study indicated that mPyTK exhibits higher photo-cross-linking efficiency than a diazirine-based photo-cross-linker, AbK, when placed at the same location of the interaction interface in vitro. When mPyTK was introduced into the adapter protein Grb2, it enabled the photocapture of EGFR in a stimulus-dependent manner. The design of mPyTK along with the identification of its cognate aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase makes it possible to map transient protein-protein interactions and their interfaces in living cells.
Keyphrases
- living cells
- protein protein
- fluorescent probe
- escherichia coli
- small molecule
- single molecule
- amino acid
- electron transfer
- small cell lung cancer
- cerebral ischemia
- tyrosine kinase
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- atomic force microscopy
- multidrug resistant
- oxidative stress
- heat shock
- cystic fibrosis
- molecular docking
- high density
- high resolution
- heat stress