Publication | Closed Access
Dissecting the Chemistry of Protein Splicing and Its Applications
269
Citations
0
References
2000
Year
Protein ChemistryProtein AssemblyBiochemistryProtein FoldingNatural SciencesMedicineRna SplicingProtein BiosynthesisMolecular BiologySynthetic BiologyPeptide SynthesisProtein EquivalentProtein EngineeringProtein SplicingProteomicsSplicing VariantRna ProcessingProtein Synthesis
Protein splicing, the protein equivalent of RNA splicing, is a newly discovered posttranslational process that proceeds through a branched protein intermediate and produces two separate polypeptides from one gene. The experimental data used to distinguish among the proposed protein-splicing mechanisms are presented along with the progress made towards fully describing the mechanism. Numerous protein engineering applications using modified inteins have been developed, including the generation of alpha-thioesters in proteins, which circumvent the limits of solid-phase peptide synthesis.