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Synthesis of proteins by automated flow chemistry

343

Citations

52

References

2020

Year

TLDR

Solid‑phase peptide synthesis of homogeneous peptides longer than ~50 residues has been hindered by inefficient coupling and side reactions. The authors aim to enable fast, on‑demand synthesis of small proteins using an expanded set of precursor amino acids. They employed an automated fast‑flow peptide synthesis platform to produce target proteins such as proinsulin, barnase, and a noncanonical HIV‑1 protease variant. The platform produced fully synthetic single‑domain proteins whose refolded peptides were indistinguishable from recombinant proteins and whose enzymatic activity matched that of ribosomally synthesized counterparts. Hartrampf et al.

Abstract

Fully synthetic whole proteins in reach Solid-phase peptide synthesis of homogeneous peptides longer than about 50 amino acids has been a long-standing challenge because of inefficient coupling and side reactions. Hartrampf et al. used an automated chemistry platform to optimize fast-flow peptide synthesis and were able to produce fully synthetic single-domain proteins (see the Perspective by Proulx). The targets included proinsulin and enzymes such as barnase and a version of HIV-1 protease containing multiple noncanonical amino acids. Refolded peptides were nearly indistinguishable from recombinant proteins, and the synthesized enzymes had activity close to that of their ribosomally synthesized counterparts. This method will enable fast, on-demand synthesis of small proteins with a vastly expanded pool of precursor amino acids. Science , this issue p. 980 ; see also p. 941

References

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