| Literature DB >> 29359756 |
Steven Bloom1, Chun Liu1, Dominik K Kölmel1, Jennifer X Qiao1,2, Yong Zhang1,2, Michael A Poss1,2, William R Ewing1,2, David W C MacMillan1.
Abstract
The advent of antibody-drug conjugates as pharmaceuticals has fuelled a need for reliable methods of site-selective protein modification that furnish homogeneous adducts. Although bioorthogonal methods that use engineered amino acids often provide an elegant solution to the question of selective functionalization, achieving homogeneity using native amino acids remains a challenge. Here, we explore visible-light-mediated single-electron transfer as a mechanism towards enabling site- and chemoselective bioconjugation. Specifically, we demonstrate the use of photoredox catalysis as a platform to selectivity wherein the discrepancy in oxidation potentials between internal versus C-terminal carboxylates can be exploited towards obtaining C-terminal functionalization exclusively. This oxidation potential-gated technology is amenable to endogenous peptides and has been successfully demonstrated on the protein insulin. As a fundamentally new approach to bioconjugation this methodology provides a blueprint toward the development of photoredox catalysis as a generic platform to target other redox-active side chains for native conjugation.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29359756 PMCID: PMC6343675 DOI: 10.1038/nchem.2888
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.427