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Expressed Protein Ligation without Intein

Yuchen Qiao, Ge Yu, Kaci C. Kratch, Xiaoyan Aria Wang, Wei Wang, Sunshine Z. Leeuwon, Shiqing Xu, Jared S. Morse, Wenshe Ray Liu

2020Journal of the American Chemical Society49 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Proteins with a functionalized C-terminus such as a C-terminal thioester are key to the synthesis of larger proteins via expressed protein ligation. They are usually made by recombinant fusion to intein. Although powerful, the intein fusion approach suffers from premature hydrolysis and low compatibility with denatured conditions. To totally bypass the involvement of an enzyme for expressed protein ligation, here we showed that a cysteine in a recombinant protein was chemically activated by a small molecule cyanylating reagent at its N-side amide for undergoing nucleophilic acyl substitution with amines including a number of l- and d-amino acids and hydrazine. The afforded protein hydrazides could be used further for expressed protein ligation. We demonstrated the versatility of this activated cysteine-directed protein ligation (ACPL) approach with the successful synthesis of ubiquitin conjugates, ubiquitin-like protein conjugates, histone H2A with a C-terminal posttranslational modification, RNase H that actively hydrolyzed RNA, and exenatide that is a commercial therapeutic peptide. The technique, which is exceedingly simple but highly useful, expands to a great extent the synthetic capacity of protein chemistry and will therefore make a large avenue of new research possible.

Topics & Concepts

InteinChemistryChemical ligationProtein splicingNative chemical ligationBiochemistryFusion proteinPeptide bondCysteineProtein tagUbiquitinDNA ligasePeptideChemical biologyRecombinant DNAEnzymeRNARNA splicingGeneUbiquitin and proteasome pathwaysRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsPeptidase Inhibition and Analysis
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