Selection of Peptide-Bismuth Bicycles Using Phage Display.
Ruo-Nan HeMeng-Jie ZhangBin DaiXu-Dong KongPublished in: ACS chemical biology (2024)
Cysteine conjugation is widely used to constrain phage displayed peptides for the selection of cyclic peptides against specific targets. In this study, the nontoxic Bi 3+ ion was used as a cysteine conjugation reagent to cross-link peptide libraries without compromising phage infectivity. We constructed a randomized 3-cysteine peptide library and cyclized it with Bi 3+ , followed by a selection against the maltose-binding protein as a model target. Next-generation sequencing of selection samples revealed the enrichment of peptides containing clear consensus sequences. Chemically synthesized linear and Bi 3+ cyclized peptides were used for affinity validation. The cyclized peptide showed a hundred-fold better affinity (0.31 ± 0.04 μM) than the linear form (39 ± 6 μM). Overall, our study proved the feasibility of developing Bi 3+ constrained bicyclic peptides against a specific target using phage display, which would potentially accelerate the development of new peptide-bismuth bicycles for therapeutic or diagnostic applications.