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Spontaneous intermolecular amide bond formation between side chains for irreversible peptide targeting.

Abstract:
Peptides and synthetic peptide-like molecules are powerful tools for analysis and control of biological function. One major limitation of peptides is the instability of their interactions with biomolecules, because of the limited accessible surface area for noncovalent interactions and the intrinsic flexibility of peptides. Peptide tags are nonetheless fundamental for protein detection and purification, because their small size minimizes the perturbation to protein function. Here we have designed a 16 amino acid peptide that spontaneously forms an amide bond to a protein partner, via reaction between lysine and asparagine side chains. This depended upon splitting a pilin subunit from a human pathogen, Streptococcus pyogenes, which usually undergoes intramolecular amide bond formation to impart mechanical and proteolytic stability to pili. Reaction of the protein partner was able to proceed to 98% conversion. The amide bond formation was independent of redox state and occurred at pH 5-8. The reaction was efficient in phosphate buffered saline and a wide range of biological buffers. Surprisingly, amide bond formation occurred at a similar rate at 4 and 37 degrees C. Both peptide and protein partners are composed of the regular 20 amino acids and reconstituted efficiently inside living E. coli. Labeling also showed high specificity on the surface of mammalian cells. Irreversible targeting of a peptide tag may have application in bioassembly, in cellular imaging, and to lock together proteins subject to high biological forces.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.1021/ja910795a

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Journal:
Journal of the American Chemical Society More from this journal
Volume:
132
Issue:
13
Pages:
4526-4527
Publication date:
2010-04-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1520-5126
ISSN:
0002-7863


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:101214
UUID:
uuid:72de8c57-db51-478c-8bf9-19bc397468c1
Local pid:
pubs:101214
Source identifiers:
101214
Deposit date:
2012-12-19
ARK identifier:

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