| Literature DB >> 20676359 |
Tiffany S Han1, Min-Min Zhang, Konkallu Hanumae Gowd, Aleksandra Walewska, Doju Yoshikami, Baldomero M Olivera, Grzegorz Bulaj.
Abstract
Despite the therapeutic promise of disulfide-rich, peptidic natural products, their discovery and structure/function studies have been hampered by inefficient oxidative folding methods for their synthesis. Here we report that converting the three disulfide-bridged mu-conopeptide KIIIA into a disulfide-depleted selenoconopeptide (by removal of a noncritical disulfide bridge and substitution of a disulfide- with a diselenide-bridge) dramatically simplified its oxidative folding while preserving the peptide's ability to block voltage-gated sodium channels. The simplicity of synthesizing disulfide-depleted selenopeptide analogs containing a single disulfide bridge allowed rapid positional scanning at Lys7 of mu-KIIIA, resulting in the identification of K7L as a mutation that improved the peptide's selectivity in blocking a neuronal (Na(v)1.2) over a muscle (Na(v)1.4) subtype of sodium channel. The disulfide-depleted selenopeptide strategy offers regioselective folding compatible with high throughput chemical synthesis and on-resin oxidation methods, and thus shows great promise to accelerate the use of disulfide-rich peptides as research tools and drugs.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20676359 PMCID: PMC2911238 DOI: 10.1021/ml900017q
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Med Chem Lett ISSN: 1948-5875 Impact factor: 4.345