Publication | Closed Access
Sortase-Mediated Protein Ligation: A New Method for Protein Engineering
527
Citations
14
References
2004
Year
EngineeringPeptide EngineeringStaphylococcus AureusMolecular BiologyLpxtg MotifProtein FoldingSortase-mediated Protein LigationMolecular SortingProteomicsMolecular BiotechnologyBiochemistryBioconjugationProtein BiosynthesisBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesPeptide LibrarySynthetic BiologyAmide BondPeptide SynthesisProtein Engineering
Sortase (SrtA), a transpeptidase from Staphylococcus aureus, catalyzes a cell-wall sorting reaction at an LPXTG motif by cleaving between threonine and glycine and subsequently joining the carboxyl group of threonine to an amino group of pentaglycine on the cell wall peptidoglycan. We have applied this transpeptidyl activity of sortase to in vitro protein ligation. We found that in the presence of sortase, protein/peptide with an LPXTG motif can be specifically ligated to an aminoglycine protein/peptide via an amide bond. Additionally, sortase can even conjugate substrates such as (d)-peptides, synthetic branched peptides, and aminoglycine-derivatized small molecules to the C terminus of a recombinant protein. The sortase-mediate protein ligation is robust, specific, and easy to perform, and can be widely applied to specific protein conjugation with polypeptides or molecules of unique biochemical and biophysical properties.
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