Regioselective protein oxidative cleavage enabled by enzyme-like recognition of an inorganic metal oxo cluster ligand.
Shorok A M AbdelhameedFrancisco de AzambujaTamara VasovićNada D SavićTanja Ćirković VeličkovićTatjana N Parac VogtPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
Oxidative modifications of proteins are key to many applications in biotechnology. Metal-catalyzed oxidation reactions efficiently oxidize proteins but with low selectivity, and are highly dependent on the protein surface residues to direct the reaction. Herein, we demonstrate that discrete inorganic ligands such as polyoxometalates enable an efficient and selective protein oxidative cleavage. In the presence of ascorbate (1 mM), the Cu-substituted polyoxometalate K 8 [Cu 2+ (H 2 O)(α 2 -P 2 W 17 O 61 )], (Cu II WD, 0.05 mM) selectively cleave hen egg white lysozyme under physiological conditions (pH =7.5, 37 °C) producing only four bands in the gel electropherogram (12.7, 11, 10, and 5 kDa). Liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry analysis reveals a regioselective cleavage in the vicinity of crystallographic Cu II WD/lysozyme interaction sites. Mechanistically, polyoxometalate is critical to position the Cu at the protein surface and limit the generation of oxidative species to the proximity of binding sites. Ultimately, this study outlines the potential of discrete, designable metal oxo clusters as catalysts for the selective modification of proteins through radical mechanisms under non-denaturing conditions.
Keyphrases
- mass spectrometry
- metal organic framework
- liquid chromatography
- protein protein
- amino acid
- binding protein
- dna binding
- aqueous solution
- nitric oxide
- small molecule
- risk assessment
- ms ms
- tandem mass spectrometry
- high performance liquid chromatography
- heat shock protein
- high resolution mass spectrometry
- molecular docking
- water soluble
- human health