| Literature DB >> 34096148 |
Monika Kaminska1, Pierrick Bruyat1, Carole Malgorn1, Marion Doladilhe1, Evelyne Cassar-Lajeunesse1, Carole Fruchart Gaillard1, Mélissa De Souza1, Fabrice Beau1, Robert Thai1, Isabelle Correia2, Andrzej Galat1, Dimitris Georgiadis3, Olivier Lequin2, Vincent Dive1, Sarah Bregant1, Laurent Devel1.
Abstract
Activity-based probes enable discrimination between the active enzyme and its inactive or inactivated counterparts. Since metalloproteases catalysis is non-covalent, activity-based probes targeting them have been systematically developed by decorating reversible inhibitors with photo-crosslinkers. By exploiting two types of ligand-guided chemistry, we identified novel activity-based probes capable of covalently modifying the active site of matrix metalloproteases (MMPs) without any external trigger. The ability of these probes to label recombinant MMPs was validated in vitro and the identity of the main labelling sites within their S3 ' region unambiguously assigned. We also demonstrated that our affinity probes can react with rhMMP12 at nanogram scale (that is, at 0.07 % (w/w)) in complex proteomes. Finally, this ligand-directed chemistry was successfully applied to label active MMP-12 secreted by eukaryote cells. We believe that this approach could be transferred more widely to many other metalloproteases, thus contributing to tackle their unresolved proteomic profiling in vivo.Entities:
Keywords: activity-based probes; affinity-labelling; ligand-directed chemistry; macrophage elastase; metalloproteases
Year: 2021 PMID: 34096148 DOI: 10.1002/anie.202106117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336