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Probing the Binding Mechanism of Acylated Peptides to Human Serum Albumin.

Haitao HuAnthony S RansdellHongchang QuJim D DurbinFrancisco A ValenzuelaSelene Hernandez-BuquerMalgorzata D Gonciarz
Published in: ACS chemical biology (2023)
Peptides represent an increasingly important class of pharmaceutical products. During the last decade or so, acylation with fatty acids has demonstrated considerable success in prolonging the circulating half-life of therapeutic peptides by exploiting the ability of fatty acids to reversibly bind to human serum albumin (HSA), thus significantly impacting their pharmacological profiles. Employing methyl- 13 C-labeled oleic acid or palmitic acid as probe molecules and exploiting HSA mutants designed to probe fatty acid binding, the signals in two-dimensional (2D) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra corresponding to high-affinity fatty acid binding sites in HSA were assigned. Subsequently, using a set of selected acylated peptides, competitive displacement experiments by 2D NMR identified a primary fatty acid binding site in HSA utilized in acylated peptide binding. These results represent an important first step toward understanding the structural basis for acylated peptides binding to HSA.
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