Publication | Open Access
Site‐Selective Modification of Peptides and Proteins via Interception of Free‐Radical‐Mediated Dechalcogenation
41
Citations
45
References
2020
Year
Peptide EngineeringMolecular BiologyPeptide ScienceChemical BiologySite‐selective ModificationPersistent Radical TrapCanonical Amino AcidsFree‐radical‐mediated DechalcogenationBiochemistryDiversity-oriented SynthesisBioconjugationNative PeptidesBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesPeptide LibraryPeptide TherapeuticPeptide SynthesisProtein EngineeringSmall Molecules
Abstract The development of site‐selective chemistry targeting the canonical amino acids enables the controlled installation of desired functionalities into native peptides and proteins. Such techniques facilitate the development of polypeptide conjugates to advance therapeutics, diagnostics, and fundamental science. We report a versatile and selective method to functionalize peptides and proteins through free‐radical‐mediated dechalcogenation. By exploiting phosphine‐induced homolysis of the C−Se and C−S bonds of selenocysteine and cysteine, respectively, we demonstrate the site‐selective installation of groups appended to a persistent radical trap. The reaction is rapid, operationally simple, and chemoselective. The resulting aminooxy linker is stable under a variety of conditions and selectively cleavable in the presence of a low‐oxidation‐state transition metal. We have explored the full scope of this reaction using complex peptide systems and a recombinantly expressed protein.
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