Literature DB >> 30305389

Rapid and low-cost multiplex synthesis of chemokine analogs.

Marianne Paolini-Bertrand1, Fabrice Cerini1, Elsa Martins1, Ilaria Scurci1, Oliver Hartley2.   

Abstract

Peptides represent a promising source of new medicines, but improved technologies are needed to facilitate discovery and optimization campaigns. In particular, longer peptides with multiple disulfide bridges are challenging to produce, and producing large numbers of structurally related variants is dissuasively costly and time-consuming. The principal cost and time drivers are the multiple column chromatography purification steps that are used during the multistep chemical synthesis procedure, which involves both ligation and oxidative refolding steps. In this study, we developed a method for multiplex parallel synthesis of complex peptide analogs in which the structurally variant region of the molecule is produced as a small peptide on a 384-well synthesizer with subsequent ligation to the longer, structurally invariant region and oxidative refolding carried out in-well without any column purification steps. To test the method, we used a panel of 96 analogs of the chemokine RANTES (regulated on activation normal T cell expressed and secreted)/CCL5 (69 residues, two disulfide bridges), which had been synthesized using standard approaches and characterized pharmacologically in an earlier study. Although, as expected, the multiplex method generated chemokine analogs of lower purity than those produced in the original study, it was nonetheless possible to closely match the pharmacological attributes (anti-HIV potency, capacity to elicit G protein signaling, and capacity to elicit intracellular receptor sequestration) of each chemokine analog to reference data from the earlier study. This rapid, low-cost approach has the potential to support discovery and optimization campaigns based on analogs of other chemokines as well as those of other complex peptide and small protein targets of a similar size.
© 2018 Paolini-Bertrand et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  C-C chemokine receptor type 5 (CCR5); HIV; chemokine; drug discovery; high-throughput screening (HTS); peptide chemical synthesis; protein engineering

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30305389      PMCID: PMC6295741          DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA118.004370

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


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