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Site-selective lysine conjugation methods and applications towards antibody–drug conjugates

Muhammed Haque, Nafsika Forte, James R. Baker

2021Chemical Communications113 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Site-selective protein modification is of significant interest in chemical biology research, with lysine residues representing a particularly challenging target. Whilst lysines are popular for bioconjugation, due to their nucleophilicity, solvent accessibility and the stability of the resultant conjugates, their high abundance means site-selectivity is very difficult to achieve. Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) present a powerful therapeutic application of protein modification, and have often relied extensively upon lysine bioconjugation for their synthesis. Here we discuss advances in methodologies for achieving site-selective lysine modification, particularly within the context of antibody conjugate construction, including the cysteine-to-lysine transfer (CLT) protocol which we have recently reported.

Topics & Concepts

BioconjugationLysineConjugateChemistryContext (archaeology)Combinatorial chemistryCysteineChemical modificationAntibody-drug conjugateBiochemistryAntibodyAmino acidBiologyMonoclonal antibodyEnzymeImmunologyMathematicsPaleontologyMathematical analysisClick Chemistry and ApplicationsPeptidase Inhibition and AnalysisMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research