Publication | Closed Access
Oxidative Folding of Peptides with Cystine‐Knot Architectures: Kinetic Studies and Optimization of Folding Conditions
30
Citations
74
References
2012
Year
Knottin FamiliesPeptide EngineeringMolecular BiologyPeptide ScienceOxidative FoldingProtein RefoldingChemical BiologyMedicinal ChemistryProtein FoldingBiophysicsBiochemistryBioactive PeptidesCoiled-coil Drug DeliveryNatural SciencesPeptide LibraryCystine-knot PeptidesCystine‐knot ArchitecturesPeptide SynthesisProtein EngineeringMedicineFolding Conditions
Bioactive peptides often contain several disulfide bonds that provide the main contribution to conformational rigidity and structural, thermal, or biological stability. Among them, cystine-knot peptides-commonly named "knottins"-make up a subclass with several thousand natural members. Hence, they are considered promising frameworks for peptide-based pharmaceuticals. Although cystine-knot peptides are available through chemical and recombinant synthetic routes, oxidative folding to afford the bioactive isomers still remains a crucial step. We therefore investigated the oxidative folding of ten protease-inhibiting peptides from two knottin families, as well as that of an HIV entry inhibitor and of aprotinin, under two conventional sets of folding conditions and by a newly developed procedure. Kinetic studies identified folding conditions that resulted in correctly folded miniproteins with high rates of conversion even for highly hydrophobic and aggregation-prone peptides in concentrated solutions.
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