Zoë V F Wright1, Stephen McCarthy1, Rachael Dickman1, Francis E Reyes2, Silvia Sanchez-Martinez2, Adam Cryar3,4, Ian Kilford5, Adrian Hall5, Andrew K Takle5, Maya Topf4, Tamir Gonen2, Konstantinos Thalassinos3,4, Alethea B Tabor1. 1. Department of Chemistry, University College London , 20 Gordon Street, London WC1H 0AJ, United Kingdom. 2. Janelia Research Campus, Howard Hughes Medical Institute , Ashburn, Virginia 20147, United States. 3. Institute of Structural and Molecular Biology, Division of Biosciences, University College London , Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom. 4. Institute of Structural and Molecular Biology, Department of Biological Sciences, Birkbeck College, University of London , London WC1E 7HX, United Kingdom. 5. European Knowledge Centre, Eisai Limited , Mosquito Way, Hatfield, Hertfordshire AL10 9SN, United Kingdom.
Abstract
Spider venom toxins, such as Protoxin-II (ProTx-II), have recently received much attention as selective Nav1.7 channel blockers, with potential to be developed as leads for the treatment of chronic nocioceptive pain. ProTx-II is a 30-amino acid peptide with three disulfide bonds that has been reported to adopt a well-defined inhibitory cystine knot (ICK) scaffold structure. Potential drawbacks with such peptides include poor pharmacodynamics and potential scrambling of the disulfide bonds in vivo. In order to address these issues, in the present study we report the solid-phase synthesis of lanthionine-bridged analogues of ProTx-II, in which one of the three disulfide bridges is replaced with a thioether linkage, and evaluate the biological properties of these analogues. We have also investigated the folding and disulfide bridging patterns arising from different methods of oxidation of the linear peptide precursor. Finally, we report the X-ray crystal structure of ProTx-II to atomic resolution; to our knowledge this is the first crystal structure of an ICK spider venom peptide not bound to a substrate.
Spider venom toxins, such as Protoxin-II (ProTx-II), have recently received much attention as selective Nav1.7 channel blockers, with potential to be developed as leads for the treatment of chronic nocioceptive pain. ProTx-II is a 30-amino acid peptide with three disulfide bonds that has been reported to adopt a well-defined inhibitory cystine knot (ICK) scaffold structure. Potential drawbacks with such peptides include poor pharmacodynamics and potential scrambling of the disulfide bonds in vivo. In order to address these issues, in the present study we report the solid-phase synthesis of lanthionine-bridged analogues of ProTx-II, in which one of the three disulfide bridges is replaced with a thioether linkage, and evaluate the biological properties of these analogues. We have also investigated the folding and disulfide bridging patterns arising from different methods of oxidation of the linear peptide precursor. Finally, we report the X-ray crystal structure of ProTx-II to atomic resolution; to our knowledge this is the first crystal structure of an ICK spider venom peptide not bound to a substrate.
Peptide toxins hold
considerable promise as novel therapeutics
due to the potency and specificity with which they interact with their
biological targets, low cost of synthesis, and largely well-understood
metabolic pathways.[1] These peptides are
often cysteine-rich and contain intricate disulfide bonding patterns
that are crucial for their biological activity.[2] Despite these encouraging properties, however, to date
only one peptide toxin-based therapeutic (Ziconitide, marketed as
Prialt) has been approved for clinical use.[3] This is largely due to commonly encountered problems in the in vivo stability of peptide toxins. Poor transport across
the intestinal wall and susceptibility to enzymatic degradation mean
that peptide toxins are not often suitable for oral administration
and must be administered by intrathecal injection.[3] Poor pharmacodynamics profiles are also an issue: none
of these peptide toxins can cross the blood-brain or blood-nerve barriers
easily.[4] In addition, many toxins still
show a lack of receptor subtype selectivity, leading to undesired
side effects.[5] Finally, the disulfide bonds
in these toxins are susceptible to reduction in extracellular environments,
by glutathione and disulfide bond isomerases, leading to chain unfolding
and oxidative refolding with consequent loss of biological activity.[6] Considerable efforts have therefore been directed
toward developing replacements for the disulfide bonds in peptide
toxins that are not susceptible to reduction or oxidative refolding.
One of the earliest methods employed was the use of diselenide bonds,
which have only slight steric differences to the native disulfide
bond.[6] Further studies showed that the
diselenide analogues did not undergo reduction in blood plasma and
actually showed slightly improved potency over the native structure.[7] Both unsaturated[8,9] and saturated[10] dicarba-bridges have also been used as disulfide
bond replacements in cystine-rich toxins, using either ring-closing
metathesis[8,9,11] or solid-phase
peptide synthesis (SPPS) using differentially protected diamino diacids[10] as the synthetic strategy. These disulfide bond
replacements resulted in peptide toxin analogues of comparable potency,[8] and in some cases replacing different cystine
bridges can enable the resulting toxin analogue to be tuned to one
or other of two possible receptor targets.[9] Lactam bridges[12] and cystathione analogues[13] have also been employed to stabilize the structure
and modulate the activity of peptide toxins with multiple cystine
bridges, with varying impact on receptor antagonism depending on the
geometry of the replacement and which of the disulfide linkages has
been replaced. Carba-,[14,15] cystathionine-,[16] and triazole-bridged[17] analogues
of other disulfide-bridged biologically active peptides have also
been synthesized, again with varying effects on the biological properties
of these peptide analogues. Surprisingly, lanthionine-bridged analogues
of peptide toxins have not previously been studied. Replacement of
cystine by lanthionine results in a thioether side-chain bridge that
cannot be cleaved in vivo. This linkage is one bond
shorter than a cystine-bridged peptide and will have different conformational
preferences. However, replacement of cystine with lanthionine has
been carried out with other bioactive peptides such as enkephalin[18] and sandostatin[19] and has led to potent analogues of these peptides, as has replacement
of cystine with selenolanthionine in oxytocin analogues.[20]In previous work, we have developed solid-phase
methods for synthesizing
lanthionine-containing peptides, using orthogonally protected lanthionine,[21] which have enabled the synthesis of a range
of lantibiotics and analogues,[22,23] including Lactocin
S[24] and Lacticin 3147.[25] Looking to extend our methodology for incorporating lanthionine
bridges into peptides, we elected to attempt to synthesize lanthionine-containing
analogues of ProTx-II, a peptide isolated from the venom of the Peruvian
green velvet tarantula (Thrixopelma puriens).[26] ProTx-II belongs to a family of spider peptide
toxins that contain six cysteine residues. These are oxidized to form
three interlinked disulfide bonds, connected together in a 1-4, 2-5,
and 3-6 pattern referred to as the inhibitory cystine knot (ICK) scaffold.
Other examples of toxins sharing the same pattern include HwTx-IV,[27] GpTx-I,[28] and CcoTx-I[29] (Figure ). The ICK scaffold has at its core an antiparallel beta-sheet
comprising two or three strands, with a third disulfide bridge inserted
between the loop formed by the first two disulfide bridges. The number
and sequence of amino acids between the cysteine residues are highly
variable in these ICK peptides, leading to a wide variety of secondary
structural motifs and peptide sequences being displayed between each
disulfide bridge.[30,31] Effective synthetic routes to
ICK peptides with disulfide bond replacements are therefore of considerable
interest in the development of peptide toxins with in vivo stability and have the potential to fine-tune receptor selectivity.
Figure 1
Amino
acid sequences and disulfide bond connectivities of the ICK
scaffold peptides ProTx-II, HwTx-IV, PaTx-1, GpTx-I, CcoTx-I, and
Prialt.
Amino
acid sequences and disulfide bond connectivities of the ICK
scaffold peptidesProTx-II, HwTx-IV, PaTx-1, GpTx-I, CcoTx-I, and
Prialt.ProTx-II has been the subject
of particular interest from researchers
as a possible lead for the treatment of chronic nociceptive pain.[4] It has been reported to have both the highest
potency against the voltage-gated ion channel Nav1.7 (IC50 0.3 nM) and exceptional receptor subtype selectivity (100-fold
more selective for the Nav1.7 ion channel compared with
other sodium ion channel subtypes).[32] Nav1.7 has been implicated as a target for the treatment of chronic
pain after loss-of-function mutations in the corresponding SCN9A gene
left their carriers unable to feel pain, with seemingly no other detrimental
effects on their health.[33] By contrast,
gain-of-function mutations on the same gene cause sufferers to feel
a constant burning sensation, usually in their hands and feet.[34] Recently, the NMR structure of ProTx-II and
analogues has been solved (PDB ID: 2N9T).[35] Park and
co-workers have also elucidated the solution structure of ProTx-II
by NMR,[36] and both structures show that
the peptide adopts a classical ICK knot structure with a conformationally
labile region at the C-terminus.Despite these structural studies,
much remains unknown about the
mechanism of action of ProTx-II on Nav1.7. Structural and
mutagenesis investigations of the interaction of ProTx-II with the
Nav1.5 ion channel established that ProTx-II does not act
by blocking the channel pore.[37] Instead,
studies into the interaction of ProTx-II and HwTx-IV with hNav1.7 proposed that both peptides interact with the domain II
voltage-sensing domain (VSD), with ProTx-II also trapping the domain
IV VSD in the resting configuration.[38] Mutagenesis
experiments on ProTx-II by Park and co-workers,[36] and investigations of chimeric peptides incorporating sequences
from the related toxin PaTx-I, have revealed that the C-terminal domain
is especially important for the specificity and potency of its interaction
with Nav1.7, and that certain C-terminal modifications
can improve the potency relative to the wild-type (wt) peptide. Henriques
and co-workers[35] noted that ProTx-II potency
is correlated with its membrane-binding ability, and they established
the importance of certain residues in the main body of the peptide
in binding to membranes. Based on these results, they proposed a model
for ProTx-II inhibition of Nav1.7 where binding to the
membrane orientates the peptide, which allows for the C-terminal domain
to interact with the VSD of Nav1.7. Recently, Flinspach
and co-workers[39] identified JNJ63955918,
a potent and selective inhibitor of Nav1.7, from a library
of over 1500 peptides generated using ProTx-II as a scaffold, and
Deuis and co-workers have characterized the mode of action of another
highly selective hNav1.7 ICK spider venom peptide, Pn3a.[40] While these studies have considerably advanced
our understanding of ProTx-II inhibition of Nav1.7, we
do not yet have a comprehensive understanding of the binding mode
of ProTx-II, or how inhibition of Nav1.7 relates to analgesia:
injections of ProTx-II failed to elicit analgesia in a mouse model.[4] Further studies relating the structure and function
of ProTx-II are therefore vital in elucidating its mechanism of action,
which will be key to designing future effective treatments for chronic
pain.Our goal in this research was to use and extend our solid-phase
synthesis methodology to prepare lanthionine-bridged analogues of
ProTx-II and of individual rings of ProTx-II. We sought to explore
the effects of subtle changes in peptide conformation arising from
replacing each of the naturally occurring disulfide bridged rings
in turn with a thioether linked ring on the binding of these peptides
to hNav1.7 ion channels in vitro using patch-clamp assays.
As part of this study, we have also investigated the effects of using
different oxidative folding methods on the disulfide connectivity
of the wt peptide sequence and their consequences for the biological
activity of ProTx-II. Finally, we report the high-resolution X-ray
crystal structure of wt ProTx-II.
Results and Discussion
Synthesis
of (2R,6R)-(Allyl,
Aloc/Fmoc)-Lanthionine (1)
In the naturally
occurring lantibiotics, the lanthionine residues are present as the meso-(2R,6S) diastereoisomer.
However, in ProTx-II all the constituent amino acids, including the
Cys residues, are the naturally occurring l-enantiomers.
In order to synthesize analogues of ProTx-II with the Cys-Cys bridges
replaced by lanthionine bridges with the same stereochemistry, we
adapted our previously published procedure[21] to give the key orthogonally protected (R,R)-lanthionine
building block 1. Minor modifications to the original
synthetic methodology were made in order to scale up the procedure
to give multigram quantities of 1 (Supporting Information).[41]
Synthesis
of Single Ring Truncated Analogues of ProTx-II Containing
Thioether or Disulfide Bridges
Before embarking on the synthesis
of complex cystine knot structures containing both disulfide and thioether
linkages, we elected to synthesize analogues of individual rings of
ProTx-II, incorporating either thioether or disulfide bridges (Figure ). Previous work
in our group[21] and by others[24,25] has enabled cyclic lanthionine-bridged peptides with up to nine
residues in the ring to be synthesized using this solid-phase approach.
We envisaged that some development of the methodology would be needed
to access lanthionine-bridged analogues of ProTx-II with up to 13
residues in the ring. Moreover, producing smaller fragments of ProTx-II
would enable us to determine whether any biological activity would
remain in the individual rings once removed from the highly ordered
framework of the ICK structure.
Figure 2
Single ring thioether and disulfide analogues
of ProTx-II. The
positions of the Cys groups, and their Met replacements, are marked
according to the numbering from the full-length wt ProTx-II sequence.
Single ring thioether and disulfide analogues
of ProTx-II. The
positions of the Cys groups, and their Met replacements, are marked
according to the numbering from the full-length wt ProTx-II sequence.Indeed, a trial synthesis of the
C-terminal ring 2a using standard peptide coupling conditions
at room temperature revealed
problems. Linear peptide 6 was prepared on a low-loading
NovaSyn TGT resin, and lanthionine derivative 1 was then
coupled using PyAOP, HOAt, and DIPEA to give 7. This
was then elongated to give the linear peptide 8 (Scheme ).
Scheme 1
Synthesis of Lanthionine-Bridged
Peptide 2a
Reagents and conditions:
(i)
(allyl, Aloc/Fmoc)-lanthionine 1, PyAOP, HOAt, DIPEA,
DMF, μwave, 5 min, 60 °C; (ii) incorporation of standard
protected amino acids with HBTU, DIPEA, DMF, followed by deprotection
with piperidine; (iii) Pd(PPh3)4, 1,3-dimethylbarbituric
acid, DMF, CH2Cl2, then 40% piperidine/DMF;
(iv) PyAOP, HOAt, DIPEA, DMF, μwave, 5 min, 60 °C; (v)
Fmoc-Lys(Boc)-OH, HBTU, DIPEA, DMF, then 20% piperidine/DMF; (vi)
TFA, ethanedithiol, iPr3SiH, H2O.
Synthesis of Lanthionine-Bridged
Peptide 2a
Reagents and conditions:
(i)
(allyl, Aloc/Fmoc)-lanthionine 1, PyAOP, HOAt, DIPEA,
DMF, μwave, 5 min, 60 °C; (ii) incorporation of standard
protected amino acids with HBTU, DIPEA, DMF, followed by deprotection
with piperidine; (iii) Pd(PPh3)4, 1,3-dimethylbarbituric
acid, DMF, CH2Cl2, then 40% piperidine/DMF;
(iv) PyAOP, HOAt, DIPEA, DMF, μwave, 5 min, 60 °C; (v)
Fmoc-Lys(Boc)-OH, HBTU, DIPEA, DMF, then 20% piperidine/DMF; (vi)
TFA, ethanedithiol, iPr3SiH, H2O.We then envisaged chemoselective removal of the
allyl and Aloc
groups, followed by Fmoc deprotection, cyclization on-resin, installation
of the final amino acid, and cleavage from resin. However, this synthetic
sequence yielded only small amounts of the desired 2a, mixed with linear peptide byproducts in which the lanthionine residue
had not been incorporated. We therefore investigated conditions for
the incorporation of 1 using microwave irradiation coupling
conditions.[41] Coupling with PyAOP/HOAt/DIPEA
using microwave irradiation at 300 W and 60 °C for 5 min proved
to be optimal for incorporating 1 to give resin-bound
intermediate 7. Standard SPPS was then used to elongate
this to give resin-bound peptide 8. The allyl and Aloc
groups were then selectively removed with Pd(PPh3)4 using 1,3-dimethylbarbituric acid as an allyl group scavenger;[42,43] subsequent removal of the Fmoc group gave 9. This was
then selectively cyclized on-resin with PyAOP/HOAt/DIPEA,[44] again using microwave irradiation at 300 W and
60 °C for 5 min. Chain extension of 10 to give 11 was followed by resin cleavage to give analogue 2a. Using this approach, we also synthesized a second analogue, 3a, as it has recently been shown[36] that the flexible C-terminal fragment of ProTx-II is important for
both potency and sodium channel selectivity. Pleasingly, we were also
able to prepare the lanthionine analogue of the larger (13 residues)
central ring, 4a. However, unfortunately the largest
(15 residues) ring, 5a, could not be synthesized. For
comparison purposes, the Cys-linked disulfide analogues 2b, 3b, 4b, and 5b were also
synthesized. In each case the linear peptides were prepared using
standard techniques (Supporting Information) and then cyclized by stirring for 10 days at 4 °C in water,
giving the desired peptides in good yield and purity.
Synthesis of
Full-Length ProTx-II Analogues with One Disulfide
Bridge Replaced by a Thioether Bridge
Having successfully
prepared the single ring analogues, we turned our attention to the
full length analogues 12, 13, and 14 (Figure ). Our strategy for these peptides had to take into account two possible
challenges. The first is that the thioether bridges in lantibiotics
are very susceptible to aerial oxidation,[45] and therefore prolonged reaction times when forming the Cys-Cys
bridges should be avoided. The second problem that we anticipated,
in particular after the formation of the lanthionine bridge, was the
folding or aggregation of the resin-bound peptide during synthesis,
resulting in the N-terminal amino acid becoming inaccessible
to subsequent activated amino acids. In the event this proved to be
a more serious problem. Attempted solid-phase synthesis of the linear
peptides failed in each case shortly after incorporation of the first
lanthionine residue, even when microwave coupling conditions were
used, resulting in the isolation of short peptides of between 6 and
12 residues. In order to circumvent this problem, we inserted Hmb-protected
amino acids at positions 4, 14, 18, 23, and 28, in order to disrupt
hydrogen bonding and prevent on-resin aggregation.[46] For analogue 12, we also elected to use the
same protecting groups for the Cys residues at positions 2, 9, 16,
and 21. We anticipated that the presence of the thioether bridge between
positions 15 and 25 would enable the peptide to fold correctly and
the Cys-Cys bridges to be formed with the correct connectivity, without
the need for an orthogonal Cys side-chain protecting strategy. Thus,
(Scheme ) protected
lanthionine 1 was coupled to the resin-bound peptide 15 using the microwave conditions optimized for the single
ring analogues. Chain extension of 16 using standard
coupling conditions, and Hmb-protected amino acids as indicated, afforded 17. The lanthionine bridge was then formed by sequential removal
of the Fmoc and allyl/Aloc protecting groups, followed by microwave-assisted
cyclization on-resin, as before.
Figure 3
Lanthionine-bridged analogues of ProTx-II.
Scheme 2
Synthesis of Lanthionine-Bridged ProTx-II
Analogue 12
Standard protecting
groups
were used for the amino acids, with additional Hmb protection as indicated;
see Experimental Section. Reagents and conditions:
(i) 1, PyAOP, HOAt, DIPEA, DMF, μwave, 5 min, 60
°C; (ii) incorporation of standard protected amino acids with
HBTU, DIPEA, DMF, followed by deprotection with piperidine; (iii)
40% piperidine/DMF, then Pd(PPh3)4, 1,3-dimethylbarbituric
acid, DMF, CH2Cl2; (iv) PyAOP, HOAt, DIPEA,
DMF, μwave, 5 min, 60 °C; (v) incorporation of standard
protected amino acids with HBTU, DIPEA, DMF, followed by deprotection
with piperidine; (vi) TFA, iPr3SiH, H2O.
Lanthionine-bridged analogues of ProTx-II.
Synthesis of Lanthionine-Bridged ProTx-II
Analogue 12
Standard protecting
groups
were used for the amino acids, with additional Hmb protection as indicated;
see Experimental Section. Reagents and conditions:
(i) 1, PyAOP, HOAt, DIPEA, DMF, μwave, 5 min, 60
°C; (ii) incorporation of standard protected amino acids with
HBTU, DIPEA, DMF, followed by deprotection with piperidine; (iii)
40% piperidine/DMF, then Pd(PPh3)4, 1,3-dimethylbarbituric
acid, DMF, CH2Cl2; (iv) PyAOP, HOAt, DIPEA,
DMF, μwave, 5 min, 60 °C; (v) incorporation of standard
protected amino acids with HBTU, DIPEA, DMF, followed by deprotection
with piperidine; (vi) TFA, iPr3SiH, H2O.Chain extension of 18 gave
the fully protected, resin-bound
peptide intermediate 19. Subsequent cleavage of 19 from the resin, using a deprotection cocktail lacking EDT,
gave the desired fully deprotected and cyclized peptide 12 (overall yield 0.4% after purification). This suggests that the
partly folded, lanthionine-bridged structure does indeed aid the cyclization
of the disulfide bonds during the cleavage and deprotection procedure.
The same strategy was used to synthesize 14 in a yield
of 1.1% after purification.For analogue 13, as
the third and fourth cysteine
residues are next to each other in this sequence, we decided to employ
orthogonal protecting group chemistry in order to guarantee the 1-4,
3-6 connectivity. We elected to use S(Tmp)-protected cysteine[47] as this protecting group is stable to piperidine
but very labile under mild thiolysis conditions, for example in the
presence of DTT. Thus, (Scheme ) 1 was coupled to linear resin-bound peptide 20 using microwave coupling conditions to give 21, and chain extension as before afforded 22. Deprotection
of Fmoc and allyl/Aloc protecting groups, followed by microwave-assisted
cyclization on-resin, gave 23, which was again chain-extended
to give the resin-bound peptide 24. On-resin cleavage
of the Tmp protecting groups with DTT was followed by oxidation with
NCS to give the bicyclic resin-bound peptide 25. Cleavage
and deprotection using the same deprotection cocktail, lacking EDT,
followed by stirring in water at 4 °C, gave the desired tricyclic
peptide 13 in 7% yield after purification.
Scheme 3
Synthesis
of Lanthionine-Bridged ProTx-II Analogue 13
Standard protecting groups
were used for the amino acids, with additional Hmb protection as indicated;
see Experimental Section. Reagents and conditions:
(i) 1, PyAOP, HOAt, DIPEA, DMF, μwave, 5 min, 60
°C; (ii) incorporation of standard protected amino acids with
HBTU, DIPEA, DMF, followed by deprotection with piperidine; (iii)
40% piperidine/DMF, then Pd(PPh3)4, 1,3-dimethylbarbituric
acid, DMF, CH2Cl2; (iv) PyAOP, HOAt, DIPEA,
DMF, μwave, 5 min, 60 °C; (v) incorporation of standard
protected amino acids with HBTU, DIPEA, DMF, followed by deprotection
with piperidine; (vi) 5% DTT in 0.1 M NMM, DMF; (vii) NCS (2 equiv),
DMF; (viii) TFA, iPr3SiH, H2O.
Synthesis
of Lanthionine-Bridged ProTx-II Analogue 13
Standard protecting groups
were used for the amino acids, with additional Hmb protection as indicated;
see Experimental Section. Reagents and conditions:
(i) 1, PyAOP, HOAt, DIPEA, DMF, μwave, 5 min, 60
°C; (ii) incorporation of standard protected amino acids with
HBTU, DIPEA, DMF, followed by deprotection with piperidine; (iii)
40% piperidine/DMF, then Pd(PPh3)4, 1,3-dimethylbarbituric
acid, DMF, CH2Cl2; (iv) PyAOP, HOAt, DIPEA,
DMF, μwave, 5 min, 60 °C; (v) incorporation of standard
protected amino acids with HBTU, DIPEA, DMF, followed by deprotection
with piperidine; (vi) 5% DTT in 0.1 M NMM, DMF; (vii) NCS (2 equiv),
DMF; (viii) TFA, iPr3SiH, H2O.As a control for the biological testing, we also
synthesized the
parent ProTx-II structure. The linear sequence was prepared using
standard SPPS protocols (Supporting Information) and purified. Despite reports of racemization of cysteine residues
under these conditions,[48] substitution
of DIPEA as the base in the coupling step with 2,4,6-collidine did
not noticeably improve the purity of the crude linear ProTx-II produced.
Although formation of the correct connectivity of the three disulfide
bonds in these toxins is clearly crucial for folding of the peptide
into the biologically active structure, achieving regioselective disulfide
bond formation is difficult to achieve using orthogonal protecting
groups for three pairs of Cys residues.[49] Conotoxins with three disulfide bridges are typically synthesized
as a linear precursor with all six cysteines unprotected, and then
different oxidation methods are attempted until the correct topology
is formed. The wide variation in peptide sequence has precluded the
development of a single, general method for such cyclizations.[50] Intriguingly, in some cases oxidative folding
of linear conotoxin precursors has resulted in two disulfide isoforms,
both of which have potent Nav channel blocking activity.[51] However, for this family of spider toxins there
are no reports comparing the effectiveness and selectivity of different
oxidative cyclization methods. Initial attempts to cyclize the linear,
unprotected ProTx-IIpeptide sequence using the conditions reported
by Middleton[26] were unsuccessful in our
hands. We next turned to aerobic oxidation,[49] and after some investigation we determined that the purified, unprotected
linear ProTx-IIpeptide could be cyclized in H2O at 10
°C and a concentration of 0.1 mg/mL over 7 days to give the cyclized
peptide (ProTx-II/7d) cleanly and in high yield. For
comparison, ProTx-II was prepared using the conditions recently described
by Park and co-workers.[36] In this procedure,
the unpurified, unprotected linear ProTx-IIpeptide was stirred at
pH 8 in a mixture of glutathione (GSH), glutathione disulfide (GSSG),
urea, and Tris-HCl for 24 h, followed by adjustment to pH 3 and purification
of the peptide by HPLC to yield the cyclic peptide (ProTx-II/24h). As additional controls, we also purchased commercial samples of
ProTx-II from two companies, Sigma-Aldrich and Smartox.
Biological
Activity of ProTx-II and Analogues
All compounds
were tested against stably transfected cell lines expressing the hNav1.7 receptor, using the hNav1.7-HEK cell IonWorks
Population Patch Clamp Assay (Essen) and the QPatch Patch Clamp Assay
(B’SYS GmbH). Perhaps unsurprisingly, neither the single ring
lanthionine analogues 2a–4a, nor
their Cys-Cys counterparts 2b–5b,
showed any activity in these assays. Disappointingly, the full-length
lanthionine bridged analogues 12, 13, and 14 did not show any activity either. Finally, to our surprise,
the wt ProTx-II/7d that we had synthesized was completely
inactive, as was the sample purchased from Sigma-Aldrich, whereas
the ProTx-II/24h sample, and the sample from Smartox,
showed the expected activity (Supporting Information).
Disulfide Connectivity and Conformation of wt ProTx-II Prepared
by Different Oxidative Folding Methods
Liquid chromatography–mass
spectrometry (LC-MS) showed that all four samples of wt ProTx-II had
the correct amino acid composition and initially appeared to indicate
that all three disulfide bonds had formed in each sample. The peptide
samples were then compared by HPLC, and a clear difference was seen
between the retention times of the ProTx-II/7d and the ProTx-II/24h peptides; this was verified by co-injection of
the two samples (Figure ).
Figure 4
HPLC of ProTx-II/24h and ProTx-II/7d peptides.
All experiments were run using analytical HPLC Method B.
HPLC of ProTx-II/24h and ProTx-II/7d peptides.
All experiments were run using analytical HPLC Method B.This was further confirmed by comparing the HPLC
trace of the ProTx-II/24h peptide with the Smartox sample
(Supporting Information Figure S1b) and
the ProTx-II/7d peptide with the Sigma sample (Supporting Information Figure S1c). This strongly
suggested
that the ProTx-II/24h peptide had either a different
conformation or different disulfide bond connectivity to the ProTx-II/7d peptide.
Investigation of Disulfide Bond Connectivities
of the ProTx-II
Peptides by Mass Spectrometry
We reasoned that the differences
in biological activity and HPLC retention time might arise from differences
in disulfide bond connectivity between the two groups of peptides.
In particular, because the Cys residues at positions 15 and 16 are
adjacent, it was conceivable that one group of peptides might have
the 1-4, 2-5, and 3-6 connectivity pattern observed for ICK knot peptides,
and the other group might have a different connectivity, such as the
1-3, 2-5, and 4-6 pattern observed in spider toxins such as huwentoxin-II
(HwTx-II).[52] To investigate this possibility,
proteolytic digestion of the peptide samples, followed by sequencing
of the resulting products by mass spectrometry, was attempted following
the method of Middleton et al.[26] In our
hands, however, the sequencing experiments could not be reproduced,
and enzymatic digestion did not conclusively determine the disulfide
bond connectivity.We therefore decided to examine in more detail
the intact forms of the peptide by means of nano-electrospray ionization
(nanoESI) and ion mobility mass spectrometry (IM-MS). IM-MS can separate
ions based on their mass, charge, and overall shape and has been successfully
used to separate peptides of the same sequence but differing modification
states.[53,54] We hypothesized that any differences observed
in the IM-MS data between these two peptides were likely to be due
to differences in shape, which could in turn be caused by differences
in disulfide bond connectivity. The nanoESI spectra of ProTx-II/24h and ProTx-II/7d samples are shown in Figure . The charge state distribution
differs between the two samples, with the ProTx-II/24h exhibiting an overall lower charge state which is indicative of
a more folded structure.[55]
Figure 5
NanoESI spectra of (A) ProTx-II/24h and (B) ProTx-II/7d peptides. The
predominant charge states observed
are +4 and +5 for the ProTx-II/24h and ProTx-II/7d, respectively. Peaks annotated with * correspond to contaminant
species.
NanoESI spectra of (A) ProTx-II/24h and (B) ProTx-II/7d peptides. The
predominant charge states observed
are +4 and +5 for the ProTx-II/24h and ProTx-II/7d, respectively. Peaks annotated with * correspond to contaminant
species.A closer inspection of the +4
charge state from both peptides revealed
differences in the isotopic distribution (Figure ). We simulated the theoretical isotopic
distribution for a ProTx-IIpeptide which would be either
fully oxidized or fully reduced.
Figure 6
Zoom-in of the +4 charge states of (A) ProTx-II/24h and (B) ProTx-II/7d peptides and
theoretical isotope
distribution corresponding to a ProTx-II with (C) all cysteines oxidized
and (D) all cysteines reduced.
Zoom-in of the +4 charge states of (A) ProTx-II/24h and (B) ProTx-II/7d peptides and
theoretical isotope
distribution corresponding to a ProTx-II with (C) all cysteines oxidized
and (D) all cysteines reduced.Comparison of the experimental and theoretical isotope distributions
revealed that, while the ProTx-II/24h sample corresponds
to a peptide with all cysteines oxidized, the ProTx-II/7d appears to be a mixture of oxidized and fully reduced species. To
probe this even further we carried out IM-MS analyses of the +4 charge
state. Figure shows
the arrival time distributions (ATDs) for the two peptides. While
the ATD of ProTx-II/24h comprises one peak, the same
is not true for the ProTx-II/7d peptide. The ATD for
the ProTx-II/7d peptide is broad and consists of more
than one peak, signifying the existence of multiple different species
being present. Reconstructing the mass spectra that correspond to
each region of the ATD for the ProTx-II/7d sample, further
reveals that none of these co-existing forms of this peptide are in
the fully oxidized state as indicated by the isotopic ratio.
Figure 7
Arrival time
distribution (ATD) from the IM-MS analysis of the
+4 ion for (A) ProTx-II/24h and (B) ProTx-II/7d peptides. (C) The corresponding mass spectrum for ProTx-II/24h and (D–F) mass spectra corresponding to the different colored
ATD regions for ProTx-II/7d.
Arrival time
distribution (ATD) from the IM-MS analysis of the
+4 ion for (A) ProTx-II/24h and (B) ProTx-II/7d peptides. (C) The corresponding mass spectrum for ProTx-II/24h and (D–F) mass spectra corresponding to the different colored
ATD regions for ProTx-II/7d.Our native and IM-MS studies, therefore, show that the two
peptides
differ in the extent of disulfide bond formation, and this may be
responsible for the difference in activity against the target sodium
channel.
Crystal Structure of ProTx-II
To confirm the disulfide
bond connectivity of the biologically active ProTx-II, we investigated
its structure by X-ray crystallography. The structures of spider venom
peptides have generally been studied to date by NMR; this is because
their relatively small size makes solving the structure by this method
feasible, but is also due to the reported difficulty in growing suitable
crystals for X-ray crystallography.[29] In
fact, although the structures of several ICK peptides have been determined
using NMR, to date only one ICK spider-venom toxin, ceratotoxin (CcoTx-I)
has been successfully characterized by X-ray crystallography (PDB
ID: 5EPM);[29] moreover, in this structure, the target peptide
was bound to a specifically generated high-affinity antibody Fab fragment
to aid crystallization. This work represents the first reported crystal
structure of ProTx-II and, to our knowledge, is the first crystal
structure of any unbound ICK peptide toxin from spider venom.A sample of ProTx-II known to be active against Nav1.7
was crystallized, and the crystal diffracted well under synchrotron
conditions. The atomic resolution structure (0.99 Å) corroborates
many features of the previously published structure solved by NMR
(PDB ID: 2N9T).[35] The disulfide bonds can be clearly
resolved in the electron density, with the peptide showing the expected
ICK fold and disulfide bond arrangement (1-4, 2-5, 3-6), together
with a largely rigid and hydrophobic central core and more conformationally
labile C- and N-termini. The RMSD for the full-length peptide all-atom/Cα
= 3.19 Å/2.07 Å, whereas with the N- and C-termini removed
the RMSD are all-atom/Cα = 2.26 Å /1.36 Å, highlighting
the fact that most of the variability in the structure lies in the
termini. In contrast to 2N9T, but consistent with other ICK peptides
whose structures have been determined, our structure shows evidence
of hydrogen bonding consistent with a beta hairpin from residues 19
to 27. The overall fold is similar to that reported in 2N9T, but with some deviations
around M6 and L23; these could be a true reflection of the structure
or represent the effects of crystal packing.Two conformations
of the N-terminal Y1 were observed in the electron
density map. The crystal structure also shows the same hydrogen-bond
interactions between the side chains of D10 and R13 seen in the NMR
models (Figure ),
and a hydrogen bond between the side chain of E3 and the backbone
of T8, which are not found in 2N9T. Further hydrogen bonds between
the peptide backbone atoms, notably E3-K14, C9-L23 and M6-C25 give
greater stability to the overall fold. Ultimately, the crystal structure
provides conclusive proof that the biologically active form of ProTx-II
adopts the ICK fold.
Figure 8
(A) 2Fo-Fc Electron density map calculated using experimental
phases,
showing traceable peptide backbone and well-resolved side chains.
(B) Fragment of ProTx-II crystal structure showing hydrogen bonding
between R13 and D10. (C) Comparison of the X-ray crystal structure
(left) with previously published NMR ensemble (PDB ID: 2N9T) showing similar
overall folding and structure.
(A) 2Fo-Fc Electron density map calculated using experimental
phases,
showing traceable peptide backbone and well-resolved side chains.
(B) Fragment of ProTx-II crystal structure showing hydrogen bonding
between R13 and D10. (C) Comparison of the X-ray crystal structure
(left) with previously published NMR ensemble (PDB ID: 2N9T) showing similar
overall folding and structure.
Conclusions
In this paper, we report the synthesis
of three synthetic analogues
of the ICK scaffold spider toxin ProTx-II, where each of the three
disulfide bridges is regioselectively replaced by a thioether linkage.
Incorporation of orthogonally protected (2R,6R)-lanthionine via solid-phase synthesis, followed by selective
deprotection and on-resin cyclization, has enabled us to achieve for
the first time the synthesis of highly complex triply bridged peptides
with two cystine bridges and one lanthionine bridge. Moreover, in
this work we have also demonstrated that very large lanthionine-bridged
rings (up to 15 residues for peptide 14) can be synthesized
by this approach.These lanthionine-bridged peptides have larger
ring sizes than
those found in the naturally occurring lantibiotics, demonstrating
the power of this approach for designing and synthesizing conformationally
constrained peptides. It therefore also enables another approach for
the modification of naturally occurring spider venom toxins as leads
for potent and selective sodium channel blockers with good pharmacokinetic
properties, complementary to the mutagenesis and chimeric peptide
approaches previously published.[28,29,35,36,56]Although lanthionine- and selenolanthionine-bridged analogues
of
other biologically active cyclic peptides have previously been reported
to maintain or increase potency and stability relative to cystine-bridged
peptides,[18−20] this approach was not successful in delivering potent
or selective Nav1.7 channel blockers based on ProTx-II.
This could result from a number of factors: the shorter bridge between
the α-carbons; the differences between the geometrical constraints
imposed by a thioether versus a disulfide bridge; or differences in
the correct folding of the resulting peptide. Indeed, a recent NMR
study[57] comparing thioether analogues of
disulfide-bridged cyclic peptides targeting Death Receptor 5 with
cystine-bridged peptides concluded that the thioetherpeptide was
slightly less folded than the disulfidepeptide.In this regard,
we have also demonstrated the importance of choosing
the correct conditions for the oxidative folding of complex peptide
toxins. This step is currently a bottleneck in the successful high-throughput
production, and scale-up, of peptides containing multiple disulfide
bridges.[58] For ProTx-II, the presence of
a redox buffer containing an excess of GSSG and GSH appears to be
mandatory for the formation of the corrected folded toxin with all
of the disulfide bridges formed (ProTx-II/24h). Conversely,
it is clear from our IM-MS studies that aerial oxidation in water
at neutral pH gives a number of products (ProTx-II/7d), none of which is in the fully oxidized state. Whether these partially
cyclized peptides result from the kinetic formation of one or more
incorrect Cys-Cys linkages, or whether they arise from an incorrectly
folded intermediate with one or more correct Cys-Cys linkages, is
impossible to determine in this case, as the observed ATD distribution
(Figure ) could arise
from differing collision cross sections of both incorrectly folded
peptides and incomplete disulfide oxidation.This also raises
the wider issue of whether the use of aerial oxidation,
rather than the GSSG/GSH buffer, for folding the lanthionine hybrids 12, 13, and 14 may have been a contributory
factor to their lack of activity. An additional complication is that
the methodology that we have developed for synthesizing these hybrids
necessarily introduces a nonreducible linkage during the synthesis.
For multiply disulfide bridged peptides and small proteins, it is
widely accepted that there are several different pathways of oxidative
folding. These vary from one extreme in which an ensemble of heterogeneous
intermediates with many non-native disulfide bonds are initially generated,
with these rearranging over time via disulfide shuffling to give the
correctly folded and connected peptides, to the other extreme in which
the amino acid sequence dictates a folding pathway which leads predominantly
or exclusively to native disulfide bonds without subsequent rearrangement
being necessary, with intermediate situations in which the formation
of a non-native bridge creates a correctly folded peptide in which
the required cysteine residues are brought into proximity, allowing
reshuffling to give the correct connectivity.[59] Moreover, for some peptide sequences such as tick anticoagulant
peptide (TAP) it has also been shown that incorrectly folded/connected
intermediates can act as kinetic “traps”, giving highly
stable structures that are difficult to refold/reconnect into the
correct structure.[60] Thus, once a nonreducible
lanthionine bridge has been introduced during the synthesis of the
linear peptide, then the peptide may well have been trapped into a
non-natural fold from which it cannot easily refold/rearrange to the
native fold/connectivity.Importantly, in this work we have
also demonstrated the power of
IM-MS studies for rapidly determining whether the oxidative folding
method employed for synthetic ICK fold toxins gives a single, correctly
folded and oxidized peptide or a mixture of incompletely oxidized
species. We envisage that this will be particularly useful when screening
libraries of peptides[29,39] based on lead peptides from spider
venoms. Such libraries, whether produced by either solid-phase synthesis
or recombinant expression, usually rely on aerial oxidation to form
the disulfide bridges, and our present work suggests that for some
sequences in these libraries, a lack of biological activity might
result from misfolding or incomplete oxidation of the particular peptide.We have also reported here the first crystal structure of an ICK
peptide toxin from spider venom not bound to a substrate. Whereas
the X-ray crystal structure of a much larger (278 residues) phospholipase
D enzyme spider venom peptide has recently been reported,[61] smaller (30–35 residue) peptides such
as ProTx-II are surprisingly difficult to crystallize. Hitherto all
structural studies with these ICK fold spider toxins have been carried
out using NMR techniques. The high resolution of this X-ray crystal
structure structure of ProTx-II has enabled hydrogen bonds which could
not be seen in the NMR structures to be observed. In turn, this will
shed additional light on the stabilization of the ICK fold, and may
help with further analysis of the structure–activity relationships
between these toxins and the sodium channel receptors.Finally,
having demonstrated the potential of this solid-phase
peptide synthesis approach to the preparation of ICK fold peptide
toxin analogues with Cys-Cys linkages replaced by unnatural bridges,
this paves the way for the preparation of other peptide structures
with different ring sizes and bridge geometry. This opens up the potential
for the design of more potent and selective Nav1.7 channel
blockers with better pharmacokinetic properties and metabolic stability.
In addition, peptides with one side-chain bridge that is regioselectively
installed and cannot be reduced may also act as tools for investigating
the folding pathways of these multiply bridged peptides, in combination
with the IM-MS methodology reported here. Although the presence of
a nonreducible side-chain bridge could be problematic for the correct
folding of some peptide sequences, conversely in some cases it also
has the potential to streamline the folding pathways by diminishing
the number of nonproductive conformations available[10,58] and thus improving the synthetic routes to these peptides.
Experimental Section
General Experimental for
Peptide Synthesis
Protected
amino acids and coupling reagents were purchased from Novabiochem;
coupling reagents, bases, and solvents were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich.
All water used was either distilled using an Elga Purelab Option R
7 water purifier or used directly from a bottle of HPLC-grade water.
The peptides were either synthesized using an automated peptide synthesizer
or manually, using the same timings and solution volumes. Amino acid
and reagent concentrations were calculated based on the quantity and
loading of the resin. The total volume of all reagents in each step
was 1.5 mL. All reagents were dissolved in HPLC grade DMF.Microwave
couplings were carried out using a Personal Chemistry Smith Creator
microwave loaded with 5 mL reaction vials. In all cases, the vial
was irradiated for 5 min at 60 °C and 300 W before transfer of
the resin back to the reaction syringe. DMF was used as the primary
solvent throughout the peptide synthesis.Peptides were centrifuged
using an Eppendorf Centrifuge, model
5810R, and were lyophilized using a Thermo Scientific Heto PowerDry
LL1500 freeze-dryer.
Automated Peptide Synthesis
Peptides
were synthesized
on a MultiSynTech Syro Peptide Synthesizer (Model MP-60).
Manual Peptide
Synthesis
All manual coupling and deprotection
steps, and complete manual peptide syntheses, were carried out using
an IKA KS130 basic platform shaker to agitate the solutions. Reactions
were carried out in 5 mL syringes with frits, which were evacuated
by hand at the end of each reaction.
Fmoc Deprotection
For the automated peptide syntheses,
all Fmoc deprotections were carried out using a solution of 40% piperidine
in DMF, which was added to the syringe containing the resin. The mixture
was agitated for 20 s every minute for a total of 3 min before removal
of reagent by filtration under vacuum. The resin was washed with DMF
(4 × 1.5 mL) before addition of a second portion of piperidine
in DMF solution (40% v/v, 0.75 mL), followed by DMF (0.75 mL) to make
an overall 20% v/v solution of piperidine in DMF. This mixture was
agitated for 20 s every minute for a total of 10 min. The reagents
were removed by filtration under vacuum, and the resin was washed
with DMF (6 × 1.5 mL). For the manual peptide syntheses, all
Fmoc deprotections were carried out using a solution of 40% piperidine
in DMF, which was added to the syringe containing the resin. The mixture
was agitated for 3 min before removal of reagent by filtration. A
second portion of piperidine in DMF solution (40% v/v, 0.75 mL) was
added, followed by DMF (0.75 mL) to make an overall 20% v/v solution
of piperidine in DMF. This mixture was agitated for a total of 10
min. The reagents were removed by filtration, and the resin was washed
with DMF (6 × 1.5 mL).
Amino Acid Coupling
Fmoc-protected amino acid (4 equiv)
was added to the reaction syringe with HBTU (4 equiv) and DIPEA (8
equiv). The mixture was agitated for 20 s every 3 min for a total
of 40 min. The reagents were removed by filtration under vacuum, and
the resin was washed with DMF (4 × 1.5 mL).
Lanthionine
Coupling
(S)-Allyl 3-((S)-2-((9-fluorenyl-methoxycarbonyl)amino-3-tert-butoxy-3-oxopropylthio)-2-(allyloxycarbonylamino)propanoic
acid
(1) (3 equiv), PyAOP (5 equiv), and HOAt (5 equiv) were
dissolved in DMF (4 mL). To this, N,N-diisopropylethylamine
(10 equiv) was added and left to react for 1 min before addition to
a microwave vial containing the resin. The vial was irradiated for
5 min at 60 °C before transfer of the resin back to the reaction
syringe. The resin was then washed with DMF (4 × 1.5 mL).
Allyl/Alloc
Deprotection
Simultaneous deprotection
of both the allyl and Alloc ester groups was performed using tetrakistriphenylphosphine
palladium(0) (1 equiv) and 1,3-dimethylbarbituric acid (10 equiv)
in a 1:1 solution of CHCl3: DMF (2 mL). This was left to
react for 2 h in the dark under argon before removal of the solution
by filtration. The resin was then washed with CH2Cl2 (10 × 1.5 mL), sodium diethyldithiocarbamate (5% w/v,
15 × 1.5 mL), and DMF (10 × 1.5 mL).
Lanthionine
Cyclization
N,N-Diisopropylethylamine
(10 equiv) was added to a solution of PyAOP (5 equiv) and HOAt (5
equiv) in DMF (4 mL). The solution was left to react for 1 min before
addition to a microwave vial containing the resin. The vial was irradiated
for 5 min at 60 °C before transfer of the resin back to the reaction
syringe. The resin was then washed with DMF (4 × 1.5 mL).
Cleavage
from the Resin
Peptides were first washed
with DMF (4 × 1.5 mL), CH2Cl2 (4 ×
1.5 mL), methanol (4 × 1.5 mL), and diethyl ether (4 × 1.5
mL) before drying in a desiccator for 45 min. A solution of 94% TFA,
2.5% water, 2.5% EDT, and 1% TIPS (2.5 mL) was then added to the resin
and left to agitate for 30 min on the platform shaker. After this
time, the entire solution was transferred to a Falcon tube, and 12
mL of diethyl ether was added to precipitate the peptide. The cleavage
procedure was then repeated with fresh cleavage solution (2.5 mL containing
94% TFA, 2.5% water, 2.5% EDT, and 1% TIPS) and left to agitate for
a further 40 min. The entire solution was again transferred to a Falcon
tube before addition of 12 mL of diethyl ether to precipitate the
peptide.The Falcon tubes were then centrifuged for 10 min at
4000 rpm and 4 °C before decanting off the diethyl ether solution.
This process was performed three times in total before re-dissolving
the peptide in water and lyophilizing.
HPLC Purification
The peptides were analyzed and purified
via reverse phase HPLC using either a Varian ProStar system with a
model 210 solvent delivery module and a model 320 UV detector or a
Dionex system with a PDA-100 photodiode array detector and a model
ASI-100 automated sample injector. The preparative purification was
performed using an ACE C8-300 semipreparative column (150 × 10
mm, flow rate of 8.0 mL/min), with UV detection at 215 and 254 nm,
loaded with 200–1850 μL aliquots of a 10–20 mg/mL
solution of peptide dissolved in water. Gradient conditions are reported
for each peptide. The fractions containing the correct peak were pooled,
the solvent was removed under reduced pressure to approximately 2
mL, and the solution was freeze-dried.
HPLC Analysis
All peptides were analyzed using UV detection
at 215 and 254 nm, using the conditions shown below. Retention times
are reported for each peptide.
HPLC Method A
ACE C8-300 analytical
column (150 ×
10 mm, flow rate of 1.0 mL/min). Gradient: 2–98% B over 20
min (A = water, B = acetonitrile, 0.1% TFA).
HPLC Method
B
Dr Maisch C8 column (Reprosil Gold 200
C8, 5 μm, 250 × 4.6 mm, flow rate of 1.0 mL min–1). Gradient: 0–2 min on 95% A; then 5–95% B over 48
min; then 95% B over 2 min; then 95–5% B over 3 min; then 5%
B over 5 min (A = water, B = acetonitrile, 0.1% TFA).
ESI-MS
Analysis
This was performed on a Waters Acquity
Ultra Performance LC/MS machine using a linear gradient of 5–95%
B over 5 min (A = water, B = acetonitrile, 0.1% TFA). The analysis
of the chromatograms was conducted using MassLynx software version
4.0.
Single Ring Thioether Analogue 2a
The
synthesis was carried out on a 100 mg scale using preloaded Fmoc-Lys(Boc)-NovaSyn
resin (loading 0.24 mmol/g). The following protected amino acids were
used: Fmoc-Glu(OtBu)-OH; Fmoc-Gly-OH; Fmoc-Lys(Boc)-OH;
Fmoc-Leu-OH; Fmoc-Met-OH: Fmoc-Arg(Pbf)-OH; Fmoc-Val-OH; Fmoc-Trp(Boc)-OH.
The peptide was assembled following the strategy outlined in Scheme . Amino acid coupling
steps, Fmoc deprotection, coupling of lanthionine 1,
removal of the allyl/Aloc groups, and cyclization were all carried
out according to the general procedures above. The peptide was cleaved
under standard conditions, washed with ether, and lyophilized. The
peptide was purified by semipreparative HPLC using a gradient of 5–50%
B over 15 min (A = water, B = acetonitrile) to yield 3 mg of product
(8%). m/z (ES+) 855.66
([M + 2H]2+), 570.68 ([M + 3H]3+), 428.23 ([M
+ 4H]4+). HPLC Method A:tR = 6.9 min.
Single Ring Thioether Analogue 3a
The
synthesis was carried out on a 100 mg scale using preloaded Fmoc-Trp(Boc)-NovaSyn
resin (loading 0.20 mmol/g). The following protected amino acids were
used: Fmoc-Glu(OtBu)-OH; Fmoc-Lys(Boc)-OH; Fmoc-Leu-OH;
Fmoc-Met-OH: Fmoc-Arg(Pbf)-OH; Fmoc-Val-OH; Fmoc-Trp(Boc)-OH. The
following Hmb-protected amino acids were also incorporated: Fmoc-(FmocHmb)-Gly-OH
(position 5); Fmoc-(FmocHmb)-Leu-OH (position 10); Fmoc-(FmocHmb)-Lys(Boc)-OH
(position 15). The peptide was assembled following the strategy outlined
in Scheme . Amino
acid coupling steps, Fmoc deprotection, coupling of lanthionine 1, removal of the allyl/Aloc groups, and cyclization were
all carried out according to the general procedures above. The peptide
was cleaved under standard conditions, washed with ether, and lyophilized.
The peptide was purified by semipreparative HPLC using a gradient
of 10–55% B over 8 min (A = water, B = acetonitrile) to yield
4 mg of product (9%). m/z (ES+) 538.27 ([M + 4H]4+). HPLC Method A: tR = 2.4 min.
Single Ring Thioether Analogue 4a
The
synthesis was carried out on a 100 mg scale using preloaded Fmoc-Trp(Boc)-NovaSyn
resin (loading 0.20 mmol/g). The following protected amino acids were
used: Fmoc-Asp(OtBu)-OH; Fmoc-Glu(OtBu)-OH;
Fmoc-Gly-OH; Fmoc-Lys(Boc)-OH; Fmoc-Leu-OH; Fmoc-Met-OH: Fmoc-Arg(Pbf)-OH;
Fmoc-Ser(tBu)-OH; Fmoc-Thr(tBu)-OH; Fmoc-Val-OH;
Fmoc-Trp(Boc)–OH. The peptide was assembled following the strategy
outlined in Scheme . Amino acid coupling steps, Fmoc deprotection, coupling of lanthionine 1, removal of the allyl/Aloc groups, and cyclization were
all carried out according to the general procedures above. The peptide
was cleaved under standard conditions, washed with ether, and lyophilized.
The peptide was purified by semipreparative HPLC using a gradient
of 5–50% B over 15 min (A = water, B = acetonitrile) to yield
0.5 mg of product (1%). m/z (ES+) 1021.71 ([M + 2H]2+). HPLC Method A: tR = 2.6 min.
Full-Length C-Terminal
Thioether Analogue 12
The synthesis was carried
out on a 100 mg scale using preloaded
Fmoc-Trp(Boc)-NovaSyn resin (loading 0.20 mmol/g). The following protected
amino acids were used: Fmoc-Cys(Trt)-OH; Fmoc-Asp(OtBu)-OH;
Fmoc-Glu(OtBu)-OH; Fmoc-Lys(Boc)-OH; Fmoc-Leu-OH; Fmoc-Met-OH:
Fmoc-Gln(Trt)-OH; Fmoc-Arg(Pbf)-OH; Fmoc-Ser(tBu)-OH; Fmoc-Thr(tBu)-OH; Fmoc-Val-OH; Fmoc-Trp(Boc)-OH; Fmoc-Tyr(tBu)-OH. The following Hmb-protected amino acids were also incorporated:
Fmoc-(FmocHmb)-Lys(Boc)-OH (positions 4, 14, 28); Fmoc-(FmocHmb)-Gly-OH
(position 18); Fmoc-(FmocHmb)-Leu-OH (position 23). The peptide was
assembled following the strategy outlined in Scheme . Amino acid coupling steps, Fmoc deprotection,
coupling of lanthionine 1, removal of the allyl/Aloc
groups, and cyclization were all carried out according to the general
procedures above. The peptide was cleaved from the resin using a solution
of 96.5% TFA, 2.5% water, and 1% TIPS (2.5 mL) and left to stir for
1 h. After this time, the entire solution was transferred to a Falcon
tube, and 12 mL of diethyl ether was added to precipitate the peptide.
The Falcon tube was then centrifuged for 10 min at 4000 rpm and 4
°C before decanting off the diethyl ether solution. This process
was performed three times in total before re-dissolving the peptide
in water and lyophilizing. The peptide was purified by semipreparative
HPLC using a gradient of 10–55% B over 15 min (A = water, B
= acetonitrile, 0.1% TFA) to yield 0.3 mg of product (0.4%). m/z (ES+) 758.50 ([M + 5H]5+). HPLC Method B: tR = 19.16
min.
Full-Length Middle Ring Thioether Analogue 13
The synthesis was carried out on a 100 mg scale using preloaded
Fmoc-Trp(Boc)-NovaSyn resin (loading 0.20 mmol/g). The following protected
amino acids were used: Fmoc-Cys(Trt)-OH (positions 15, 25); Fmoc-Cys(S(Tmp))-OH
(positions 2, 16); Fmoc-Asp(OtBu)-OH; Fmoc-Glu(OtBu)-OH; Fmoc-Lys(Boc)-OH; Fmoc-Leu-OH; Fmoc-Met-OH: Fmoc-Gln(Trt)-OH;
Fmoc-Arg(Pbf)-OH; Fmoc-Ser(tBu)-OH; Fmoc-Thr(tBu)-OH; Fmoc-Val-OH; Fmoc-Trp(Boc)-OH; Fmoc-Tyr(tBu)–OH.
The following Hmb-protected amino acids were also incorporated: Fmoc-(FmocHmb)-Lys(Boc)-OH
(positions 4, 14, 28); Fmoc-(FmocHmb)-Gly-OH (position 18); Fmoc-(FmocHmb)-Leu-OH
(position 23). The peptide was assembled following the strategy outlined
in Scheme . Amino
acid coupling steps, Fmoc deprotection, coupling of lanthionine 1, removal of the allyl/Aloc groups, and cyclization were
all carried out according to the general procedures above. Selective
deprotection of the S(Tmp) groups from the orthogonally protected
cysteine residues was carried out using 5% DTT in 0.1 M NMM in DMF
(1.5 mL) (3 × 30 min) before washing with DMF (4 × 1.5 mL).
The deprotected cysteines were then cyclized using N-chlorosuccinimide (53.4 mg, 2 equiv) in DMF (2 mL) for 1.5 h before
again washing with DMF (4 × 1.5 mL). The peptide was cleaved
from the resin using a solution of 96.5% TFA, 2.5% water, and 1% TIPS
(2.5 mL) and left to stir for 1 h. After this time, the entire solution
was transferred to a Falcon tube, and 12 mL of diethyl ether was added
to precipitate the peptide. The Falcon tube was then centrifuged for
10 min at 4000 rpm and 4 °C before decanting off the diethyl
ether solution. This process was performed three times in total before
re-dissolving the peptide in water and lyophilizing. The peptide was
purified by semipreparative HPLC using a gradient of 10–55%
B over 15 min (A = water, B = acetonitrile, 0.1% TFA) to yield 5 mg
of product (7%). This was then dissolved in water (pH 7.7) at 1 mg/10
mL concentration, stirred for a further 11 days at 4 °C to ensure
complete disulfide bond formation, then lyophilized. m/z (ES+) 544.64 ([M + 7H]7+). HPLC Method B: tR = 19.15 min.
Full-Length
N-Terminal Thioether Analogue 14
The synthesis
was carried out on a 100 mg scale using preloaded
Fmoc-Trp(Boc)-NovaSyn resin (loading 0.20 mmol/g). The following protected
amino acids were used: Fmoc-Cys(Trt)-OH; Fmoc-Asp(OtBu)-OH;
Fmoc-Glu(OtBu)-OH; Fmoc-Lys(Boc)-OH; Fmoc-Leu-OH; Fmoc-Met-OH:
Fmoc-Gln(Trt)-OH; Fmoc-Arg(Pbf)-OH; Fmoc-Ser(tBu)-OH; Fmoc-Thr(tBu)-OH; Fmoc-Val-OH; Fmoc-Trp(Boc)-OH; Fmoc-Tyr(tBu)-OH. The following Hmb-protected amino acids were also incorporated:
Fmoc-(FmocHmb)-Lys(Boc)-OH (positions 4, 14, 28); Fmoc-(FmocHmb)-Gly-OH
(position 18); Fmoc-(FmocHmb)-Leu-OH (position 23). The peptide was
assembled following the general strategy outlined in Scheme , but with the protected lanthionine 1 incorporated at position 16 and cyclized at position 2.
Amino acid coupling steps, Fmoc deprotection, coupling of lanthionine 1, removal of the allyl/Aloc groups, and cyclization were
all carried out according to the general procedures above. The peptide
was cleaved from the resin using a solution of 96.5% TFA, 2.5% water,
and 1% TIPS (2.5 mL) and left to stir for 1 h. After this time, the
entire solution was transferred to a Falcon tube, and 12 mL of diethyl
ether was added to precipitate the peptide. The Falcon tube was then
centrifuged for 10 min at 4000 rpm and 4 °C before decanting
off the diethyl ether solution. This process was performed three times
in total before re-dissolving the peptide in water and lyophilizing.
The peptide was purified by semipreparative HPLC using a gradient
of 10–55% B over 15 min (A = water, B = acetonitrile, 0.1%
TFA) to yield 0.8 mg of product (1%). m/z (ES+) 544.64 ([M + 7H]7+). HPLC Method B: tR = 19.11 min.
Synthesis of ProTx-II
The synthesis was carried out
on a 100 mg scale using preloaded Fmoc-Trp(Boc)-NovaSyn resin (loading
0.20 mmol/g). The following protected amino acids were used: Fmoc-Cys(Trt)-OH,
Fmoc-Asp(OtBu)-OH; Fmoc-Glu(OtBu)-OH; Fmoc-Gly-OH;
Fmoc-Lys(Boc)-OH; Fmoc-Leu-OH; Fmoc-Met-OH: Fmoc-Gln(Trt)-OH; Fmoc-Arg(Pbf)-OH;
Fmoc-Ser(tBu)-OH; Fmoc-Thr(tBu)-OH; Fmoc-Val-OH;
Fmoc-Trp(Boc)-OH; Fmoc-Tyr(tBu)-OH. Amino acid coupling
steps and Fmoc deprotection were all carried out according to the
general procedures above. The peptide was cleaved under standard conditions,
washed with ether, and lyophilized.
ProTx-II/7d
The crude peptide was purified
using a gradient of 35–60% B over 15 min (A = water, B = acetonitrile,
0.1% TFA) to give the linear peptide: m/z (ES+) 765.93 ([M + 5H]5+), 639.57 ([M + 6H]6+. Analytical HPLC: tR = 2.4 min.
The peptide was then allowed to cyclize for 7 days in pure water at
4 °C and a concentration of 0.1 mg/mL. The solution was then
concentrated to approximately 2 mL, flash frozen, and lyophilized
to yield the cyclized peptide as a white solid (10 mg, 13%) m/z (ES+) 1276.51 ([M + 3H]3+), 957.43 ([M + 4H]4+), 765.93 ([M + 5H]5+), 638.72 ([M + 6H]6+). HPLC Method B: tR = 21.80 min.
ProTx-II/24h
Glutathione (0.15 mM) and
glutathione disulfide (0.3 mM) were added to a mixture of urea (2
M) and Tris-HCl (0.1 M) in water. The pH was adjusted to 8.0 using
saturated aqueous sodium bicarbonate. A solution of crude linear ProTx-II
was added at a concentration of 0.1 mg/mL and left to stir for 24
h at room temperature. After this time, the pH of the solution was
adjusted to pH 3 using HCl (2 M). The peptide was purified by semipreparative
HPLC: gradient: 0–1.5 min on 95% A; then 5–70% B over
38 min; then 70% B over 2.0 min; then 70–5% B over 1.1 min;
then 5% B over 2.4 min (A = water, B = acetonitrile, 0.1% TFA). The
peptide was further purified using analytical HPLC Method B: tR = 21.03 min.
Automated and Manual Patch
Clamp Assays
Peptides were
diluted to a concentration of 100 nM and tested against stably transfected
cell lines expressing the hNav1.7 receptor. Peptides 2a, 2b, 4a, 4b, 5b, 12, 13, 14, ProTx-II/7d, Sigma, and Smartox were tested against stably
transfected cell lines expressing the hNav1.7 receptor,
using the hNav1.7-HEK cell IonWorks Population Patch Clamp Assay,
as designed by Essen Bioscience. These peptides were tested at 11
different points to make an IC50 curve using 3-fold dilution from
1 μM to 0.000001 μM in triplicate, using tetracaine as
the control molecule. The samples were allowed to incubate for 5–7
min before testing occurred and were tested in the presence of 0.1%
bovine serum albumin to prevent the samples adhering to the side of
the microtiter plate. The percentage inhibition between the first
and 20th pulses was then analyzed and plotted on a graph. Peptides 3a, 3b, 14, ProTx-II/24h, ProTx-II/7d, Sigma, Smartox, and the linear sequence
of ProTx-II were tested using the QPatch Patch Clamp Assay as designed
by B’SYS GmbH. hNav1.7 inward peak currents were
recorded in CHO cells stably transfected with cDNA encoding this sodium
channel in the resting, fast and slow inactivated state. Lidocaine
was used as the reference. Full details of these experiments are in
the Supporting Information.
HPLC Analysis
of ProTx-II Samples
ProTx-II samples
were mixed as indicated and co-injected into a Dr Maisch C8 column,
eluting with HPLC Method B.
NanoESI and IM-MS Analyses
All measurements were carried
out using a G2Si mass spectrometer (Waters, UK). The TOF analyzer
was operated in V-optic mode and tuned for an operating resolution
of 20 000 fwhm. The instrument was mass calibrated using a
2 mg/mL solution of CsI. ProTx-II samples were dissolved in 50% MeOH
with 0.1% HCOOH and 2.5 μL aliquots, of 10 μM concentration,
were delivered to the mass spectrometer by means of nanoESI using
gold-coated capillaries, prepared in house. Instrumental parameters
were as follows unless otherwise specified: capillary voltage 0.9
kV, cone voltage 40 V, trap energy 4 V, transfer energy 2 V, bias
voltage 45 V, IMS pressure 3 mbar, IMS wave velocity 650 m/s, IMS
wave height 35 V. Data acquisition, processing, and calculation of
theoretical isotopic distributions were carried out using MassLynx
(v4.1) software (Waters Corp., Milford, MA). IM-MS data were processed
in Driftscope v2.8 and exported for further analysis to MassLynx.
Authors: Luiz F A Santos; Amadeu H Iglesias; Eduardo J Pilau; Alexandre F Gomes; Fabio C Gozzo Journal: J Am Soc Mass Spectrom Date: 2010-09-21 Impact factor: 3.109
Authors: Daniel M Lajoie; Sue A Roberts; Pamela A Zobel-Thropp; Jared L Delahaye; Vahe Bandarian; Greta J Binford; Matthew H J Cordes Journal: J Biol Chem Date: 2015-03-09 Impact factor: 5.157
Authors: Aline Dantas de Araujo; Mehdi Mobli; Joel Castro; Andrea M Harrington; Irina Vetter; Zoltan Dekan; Markus Muttenthaler; JingJing Wan; Richard J Lewis; Glenn F King; Stuart M Brierley; Paul F Alewood Journal: Nat Commun Date: 2014 Impact factor: 14.919