Literature DB >> 10864771

Protein synthesis by solid-phase chemical ligation using a safety catch linker.

A Brik1, E Keinan, P E Dawson.   

Abstract

The native chemical ligation reaction has been used extensively for the synthesis of the large polypeptides that correspond to folded proteins and domains. The efficiency of the synthesis of the target protein is highly dependent on the number of peptide segments in the synthesis. Assembly of proteins from multiple components requires repeated purification and lyophilization steps that give rise to considerable handling losses. In principle, performing the ligation reactions on a solid support would eliminate these inefficient steps and increase the yield of the protein assembly. A new strategy is described for the assembly of large polypeptides on a solid support that utilizes a highly stable safety catch acid-labile linker. This amide generating linker is compatible with a wide range of N-terminal protecting groups and ligation chemistries. The utility of the methodology is demonstrated by a three-segment synthesis of vMIP I, a chemokine that contains all 20 natural amino acids and has two disulfide bonds. The crude polypeptide product was recovered quantitatively from the solid support and purified in 20%-recovered yield. This strategy should facilitate the synthesis of large polypeptides and should find useful applications in the assembly of protein libraries.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10864771     DOI: 10.1021/jo000346s

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Org Chem        ISSN: 0022-3263            Impact factor:   4.354


  14 in total

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8.  Hybrid phase ligation for efficient synthesis of histone proteins.

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9.  Total chemical synthesis of proteins without HPLC purification.

Authors:  S F Loibl; Z Harpaz; R Zitterbart; O Seitz
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10.  Facile Synthesis of a Next Generation Safety-Catch Acid-Labile Linker, SCAL-2, Suitable for Solid-Phase Synthesis, On-Support Display and for Post-Synthesis Tagging.

Authors:  Christophe Portal; Martin Hintersteiner; Olivier Barbeau; Peter Dodd; Margaret Huggett; Irene Pérez-Pi; David Evans; Manfred Auer
Journal:  ChemistrySelect       Date:  2017-08-16       Impact factor: 2.109

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