Polymeric "Clickase" Accelerates the Copper Click Reaction of Small Molecules, Proteins, and Cells.
Junfeng ChenJiang WangKe LiYuhan WangMartin GruebeleAndrew L FergusonSteven C ZimmermanPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2019)
Recent work has shown that polymeric catalysts can mimic some of the remarkable features of metalloenzymes by binding substrates in proximity to a bound metal center. We report here an unexpected role for the polymer: multivalent, reversible, and adaptive binding to protein surfaces allowing for accelerated catalytic modification of proteins. The catalysts studied are a group of copper-containing single-chain polymeric nanoparticles (CuI-SCNP) that exhibit enzyme-like catalysis of the copper-mediated azide-alkyne cycloaddition reaction. The CuI-SCNP use a previously observed "uptake mode", binding small-molecule alkynes and azides inside a water-soluble amphiphilic polymer and proximal to copper catalytic sites, but with unprecedented rates. Remarkably, a combined experimental and computational study shows that the same CuI-SCNP perform a more efficient click reaction on modified protein surfaces and cell surface glycans than do small-molecule catalysts. The catalysis occurs through an "attach mode" where the SCNPs reversibly bind protein surfaces through multiple hydrophobic and electrostatic contacts. The results more broadly point to a wider capability for polymeric catalysts as artificial metalloenzymes, especially as it relates to bioapplications.
Keyphrases
- small molecule
- protein protein
- drug delivery
- highly efficient
- cell surface
- cancer therapy
- drug release
- water soluble
- binding protein
- transition metal
- oxide nanoparticles
- induced apoptosis
- biofilm formation
- amino acid
- cell cycle arrest
- cell death
- signaling pathway
- escherichia coli
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- cell proliferation
- crystal structure
- endoplasmic reticulum stress