| Literature DB >> 30718898 |
Wenmao Huang1, Xin Wu1, Xiang Gao1, Yifei Yu1, Hai Lei1, Zhenshu Zhu1, Yi Shi2, Yulan Chen3, Meng Qin1, Wei Wang4,5, Yi Cao6,7.
Abstract
Maleimide-thiol reactions are widely used to produce protein-polymer conjugates for therapeutics. However, maleimide-thiol adducts are unstable in vivo or in the presence of thiol-containing compounds because of the elimination of the thiosuccinimide linkage through a retro-Michael reaction or thiol exchange. Here, using single-molecule force spectroscopy, we show that applying an appropriate stretching force to the thiosuccinimide linkage can considerably stabilize the maleimide-thiol adducts, in effect using conventional mechanochemistry of force-accelerated bond dissociation to unconventionally stabilize an adjacent bond. Single-molecule kinetic analysis and bulk structural characterizations suggest that hydrolysis of the succinimide ring is dominant over the retro-Michael reaction through a force-dependent kinetic control mechanism, and this leads to a product that is resistant to elimination. This unconventional mechanochemical approach enabled us to produce stable polymer-protein conjugates by simply applying a mechanical force to the maleimide-thiol adducts through mild ultrasonication. Our results demonstrate the great potential of mechanical force for stimulating important productive chemical transformations.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30718898 DOI: 10.1038/s41557-018-0209-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.427