Login / Signup

An Organometallic Strategy for Cysteine Borylation.

Mary A WaddingtonXin ZhengJulia M StauberElamar Hakim MoullyHayden R MontgomeryLiban M A SalehPetr KrálAlexander M Spokoyny
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2021)
Synthetic bioconjugation at cysteine (Cys) residues in peptides and proteins has emerged as a powerful tool in chemistry. Soft nucleophilicity of the sulfur in Cys renders an exquisite chemoselectivity with which various functional groups can be placed onto this residue under benign conditions. While a variety of reactions have been successful at producing Cys-based bioconjugates, the majority of these feature sulfur-carbon bonds. We report Cys-borylation, wherein a benchtop stable Pt(II)-based organometallic reagent can be used to transfer a boron-rich cluster onto a sulfur moiety in unprotected peptides forging a boron-sulfur bond. Cys-borylation proceeds at room temperature and tolerates a variety of functional groups present in complex polypeptides. Further, the bioconjugation strategy can be applied to a model protein modification of Cys-containing DARPin (designed ankyrin repeat protein). The resultant bioconjugates show no additional toxicity compared to their Cys alkyl-based congeners. Finally, we demonstrate how the developed Cys-borylation can enhance the proteolytic stability of the resultant peptide bioconjugates while maintaining the binding affinity to a protein target.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • amino acid
  • protein protein
  • ionic liquid
  • binding protein
  • machine learning
  • small molecule
  • transcription factor
  • single molecule
  • oxide nanoparticles