| Literature DB >> 34725511 |
Patrick G Isenegger1, Brian Josephson1, Tim A Mollner1, Charles Buchanan2, Lukas Lercher1, Daniel Oehlrich3, D Flemming Hansen4, Shabaz Mohammed1,5,6, Andrew J Baldwin2,6, Véronique Gouverneur1, Benjamin G Davis7,8.
Abstract
Boron is absent in proteins, yet is a micronutrient. It possesses unique bonding that could expand biological function including modes of Lewis acidity not available to typical elements of life. Here we show that post-translational Cβ-Bγ bond formation provides mild, direct, site-selective access to the minimally sized residue boronoalanine (Bal) in proteins. Precise anchoring of boron within complex biomolecular systems allows dative bond-mediated, site-dependent protein Lewis acid-base-pairing (LABP) by Bal. Dynamic protein-LABP creates tunable inter- and intramolecular ligand-host interactions, while reactive protein-LABP reveals reactively accessible sites through migratory boron-to-oxygen Cβ-Oγ covalent bond formation. These modes of dative bonding can also generate de novo function, such as control of thermo- and proteolytic stability in a target protein, or observation of transient structural features via chemical exchange. These results indicate that controlled insertion of boron facilitates stability modulation, structure determination, de novo binding activities and redox-responsive 'mutation'.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34725511 PMCID: PMC8604732 DOI: 10.1038/s41589-021-00883-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem Biol ISSN: 1552-4450 Impact factor: 15.040