| Literature DB >> 23095896 |
Michael Reinwarth1, Daichi Nasu, Harald Kolmar, Olga Avrutina.
Abstract
Cystine-knot peptides display exceptional structural, thermal, and biological stability. Their eponymous motif consists of six cysteine residues that form three disulfide bonds, resulting in a notably rigid structural core. Since they highly tolerate either rational or combinatorial changes in their primary structure, cystine knots are considered to be promising frameworks for the development of peptide-based pharmaceuticals. Despite their relatively small size (two to three dozens amino acid residues), the chemical synthesis route is challenging since it involves critical steps such as head-to-tail cyclization and oxidative folding towards the respective bioactive isomer. Herein we describe the topology of cystine-knot peptides, their synthetic availability and briefly discuss potential applications of engineered variants in diagnostics and therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23095896 PMCID: PMC6268209 DOI: 10.3390/molecules171112533
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Cartoon diagrams of prototypical cystine knots. Loops are depicted in light blue and numbered according to their appearance in the sequence, α-helices in dark blue, β-sheets in red, and cysteines in yellow with Roman numerals according to their appearance in the sequence. (a) Möbius cyclotide kalata B1. (PDB-ID: 1NB1) (b) Bracelet cyclotide cycloviolacin O2. (PDB-ID: 2KNM) (c) Acyclic inhibitor cystine knot ocMCoTI-II (PDB-ID: 2IT8). Structures modeled with Yasara Ver. 12.4.1.
Figure 2Sequence alignment of certain cystine knots. Cystine connections as well as head-to-tail macrocyclization motif are indicated.
Figure 3Common strategies for backbone cyclization. Biosynthetic methods are depicted in green, chemical methods in blue, hybrid strategies are shown in turquoise. References: Intein cyclization: [39,40,41]; hydrazone cyclization: [43]; proteolytic cyclization: [44,45]; thia-zip cyclization: [46,47].
Selected folding mixtures for a number of cystine-knot peptides from various families.
| Peptide | Type | Folding conditions | Yield/Conversion | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ocMCoTI | ICK | 0.5 mM HCl, 200 mM NaHCO3, pH = 9.1, 1–1.5 mg/L peptide. | 16% a | [ |
| 29% b | ||||
| cMCoTI | ICK | 100 mM NH4OAc, pH = 8.5, GSH (1‑5 mM), 0.1 mg/L peptide | 90% c | [ |
| Variants of ocMCoTI | ICK | 50% MeCN in 100 mM (NH4)2CO3, GSH (4 eq.) | 1.8–7.7% a | [ |
| 36–72% b | ||||
| ICK toxins | ICK | GSSG/GSH (0.3 mM/0.15 mM) in 2 M urea, 100 mM Tris-HCl | 3–6% a | [ |
| EETI-II | ICK | 100 mM NH4OAc, pH = 9.1 | >80% c | [ |
| Gurmarin | ICK | 1. Orthogonal cysteine protecting groups 2. GSH/cystamine in 100 mM Tris-HCl, pH = 7.8 | 1.: 0.55% a | [ |
| 2.: 14.1% a | ||||
| GVIA and analogues | Cono-toxin | Cysteine-selenocysteine exchange, GSSG/GSH (1 mM/2 mM) | 60–78% c | [ |
| Cycloviolacin O2 | CCK | 35% DMSO, 6% Brij 35 (an oil dispersant), addition of GSH/cystamine after 24 h (2 mM/2 mM) in 100 mM Tris‑HCl, pH = 8.5 | 52% c | [ |
| Kalata B1 | CCK | 35% DMSO, 6%, Brij 35 (an oil dispersant), GSH/cystamine (2 mM/2 mM) in 100 mM NH4HCO3, pH = 8.5 | >95% c | [ |
| Kalata B2 | CCK | 50% | >95% c | [ |
| Kalata B8 | CCK | 50% | >80% c | [ |
| Cyclic hedyotide B1 | CCK | 70–80% | 48% c | [ |
| ASIP | GFCK | 100 mM Tris-buffer, pH = 7.7–7.9, 1 mM EDTA, 1 M GuHCl, GSSG/GSH (1:10) | 10% b | [ |
a: yield according to resin loading; b: yield according to purified linear precursor; c: HPLC conversion.
Figure 4In vitro folding pathways of cystine-knot peptides from different families. Most ICK peptides are thought to proceed to the folded form via formation of two-disulfide native-like intermediate. Folding of CCK peptides may either follow a similar path or proceed via a non-native 3-cystine intermediate. Structures were modeled and energy-minimized with Yasara Ver. 12.4.1.
Figure 5Proposed cyclization via native chemical ligation.
Selected cyclization conditions for a number of cystine-knot peptides from various families.
| Peptide | Type | Cyclization reaction; conditions | Yield/Conversion | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variants of cMCoTI | ICK | Immobilized trypsin; 100 mM phosphate buffer, pH = 7.4 | 90–94% a | [ |
| Variants of cMCoTI | ICK | Folding and NCL as one-pot reaction; 50% GSSG (1 mM) in 100 mM carbonate buffer, 50% peptide (3 mM) in acetonitrile | 63–72% b | [ |
| Variants of cMCoTI | ICK | Hydrazone linkage; multiple reactions from recombinantly produced barnase fusion | 0.5–1 mg/L c | [ |
| Kalata B1 | CCK | Amide bond; HBTU or BOP, respectively (1–10 eq.), DIEA in DMF | ~25% a | [ |
| Kalata B1 | CCK | NCL; 100 mM NaH2PO4, TCEP (6 eq.), pH = 7.4, 1 mg/mL peptide | 100% a | [ |
| hB1 | CCK | NCL; 100 mM NaH2PO4, 6 M GuHCl, thiophenol (100 eq.), pH = 7.5 | 100% a | [ |
| Cyclic MrIA | Cyclic cono-toxin | NCL; 100 mM Tris-HCl, pH = 7.8, 6 M GuHCl, sodium 2‑sulfonylethane sulfonate (1 mg/mL), anaerobic | 100% a | [ |
a: HPLC conversion; b: yield according to purified precursor; c: yield of purified cystine-knot peptide is given per liter cell culture.