Liganding Functional Tyrosine Sites on Proteins Using Sulfur-Triazole Exchange Chemistry.
Jeffrey W BruletAdam L BorneKun YuanAdam H LibbyKu-Lung HsuPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2020)
Tuning reactivity of sulfur electrophiles is key for advancing click chemistry and chemical probe discovery. To date, activation of the sulfur electrophile for protein modification has been ascribed principally to stabilization of a fluoride leaving group (LG) in covalent reactions of sulfonyl fluorides and arylfluorosulfates. We recently introduced sulfur-triazole exchange (SuTEx) chemistry to demonstrate the triazole as an effective LG for activating nucleophilic substitution reactions on tyrosine sites of proteins. Here, we probed tunability of SuTEx for fragment-based ligand discovery by modifying the adduct group (AG) and LG with functional groups of differing electron-donating and -withdrawing properties. We discovered the sulfur electrophile is highly sensitive to the position of modification (AG versus LG), which enabled both coarse and fine adjustments in solution and proteome activity. We applied these reactivity principles to identify a large fraction of tyrosine sites (∼30%) on proteins (∼44%) that can be liganded across >1500 probe-modified sites quantified by chemical proteomics. Our proteomic studies identified noncatalytic tyrosine and phosphotyrosine sites that can be liganded by SuTEx fragments with site specificity in lysates and live cells to disrupt protein function. Collectively, we describe SuTEx as a versatile covalent chemistry with broad applications for chemical proteomics and protein ligand discovery.
Keyphrases
- small molecule
- quantum dots
- protein protein
- drug discovery
- mass spectrometry
- high throughput
- label free
- living cells
- induced apoptosis
- binding protein
- signaling pathway
- molecular dynamics
- fluorescent probe
- cell cycle arrest
- high resolution
- cell proliferation
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- case control
- visible light
- single molecule
- structural basis
- single cell