| Literature DB >> 35497170 |
László Petri1, Péter A Szijj2, Ádám Kelemen1, Tímea Imre3, Ágnes Gömöry4, Maximillian T W Lee2, Krisztina Hegedűs5, Péter Ábrányi-Balogh1, Vijay Chudasama2, György Miklós Keserű1.
Abstract
Protein labelling has a wide variety of applications in medicinal chemistry and chemical biology. In addition to covalent inhibition, specific labelling of biomolecules with fluorescent dyes is important in both target discovery, validation and diagnostics. Our research was conducted through the fragment-based development of a new benzyl-isothiocyanate-activated fluorescent dye based on the fluorescein scaffold. This molecule was evaluated against fluorescein isothiocyanate, a prevalent labelling agent. The reactivity and selectivity of phenyl- and benzyl isothiocyanate were compared at different pHs, and their activity was tested on several protein targets. Finally, the clinically approved antibody trastuzumab (and it's Fab fragment) were specifically labelled through reaction with free cysteines reductively liberated from their interchain disulfide bonds. The newly developed benzyl-fluorescein isothiocyanate and its optimized labelling protocol stands to be a valuable addition to the tool kit of chemical biology. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 35497170 PMCID: PMC9052032 DOI: 10.1039/d0ra02934c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1Frequently used dye-isothiocyanates.
Fig. 2Reactivity of the isothiocyanate group with cysteine and lysine.
Scheme 1Reactivity of the isothiocyanate group with cysteine and lysine. For reactivity assay against GSH 20-times excess, for selectivity assay against NP 10-times excess was applied.
pH-dependent reactivity and selectivity of phenyl isothiocyanate (1) and benzyl isothiocyanate (2) on surrogate models. For the reactivity assay 0.25 mM of fragments were screened in PBS buffer against 5 mM of GSH. For the selectivity assay 1 mM of fragments were incubated in PBS buffer together with 0.1 mM of NP for 16 h at 25 °C
| Compound | pH | GSH | NP conversion and preferred amino acid |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 6.5 | 3.08 | 10% C |
| 7.4 ( | 4.25 | 10% C | |
| 8.0 | >13.9 | 5% C | |
| 9.5 | >13.9 | 15% C | |
| 2 | 6.5 | 1.13 | 79% C |
| 7.4 ( | 2.12 | 73% C | |
| 8.0 | >13.9 | 77% C, 5% C + K | |
| 9.5 | >13.9 | 31% C, 24% C + K |
The reactions is faster than the minimal time window necessary to obtain LC-MS spectra are reported here with a kinetic rate constant > 13.9, due to the minimal running time is 3 min, which would be equal to kinetic rate constant.
Protein labelling results of isothiocyanates 1 and 2 measured at 500 μM for MurAs and Cats and 200 μM for tau and KRas G12C
|
|
| |
|---|---|---|
| MurAEC RA [%][ | 53 | 3 |
| MurASA RA [%][ | 75 | 41 |
| CatBendo RA [%][ | 100 | 75 |
| CatBexo RA [%][ | 98 | 18 |
| CatX RA [%][ | 67 | 22 |
| Tau FTR [%] | 60 | 0 |
| KRas G12C FTR [%] | 62 | 14 |
pH-dependent modification of reduced trastuzumab Fab by isothiocyanates 1 and 2 measured at 10 mM concentration. Incubation was conducted with 1000-fold excess of the fragment at 37 °C for 90 mina
| Compound | Reduced Fab | |
|---|---|---|
| pH = 6.5 | pH = 8.0 | |
| 1 | No modification | 11% single mod. on LC |
| 13% single mod. on HC | ||
| 2 | 100% single mod. on LC | 100% single mod. on LC |
| 100% single mod. on HC | 100% single mod. on HC | |
LC and HC refer to the light chain and heavy chain of the Fab and yield of labelling was determined for the observed labelled/unlabelled LC/HC agents, respectively.
In this experiment a significant amount of reconjugated Fab was observed. However, full reduction was confirmed before, suggesting that only partial bioconjugation occured.
Scheme 2Synthesis of FBITC (4).
Fig. 3Fluorescent spectrometry results of 3 and 4 dyes. (a) Absorbance and (b) fluorescence spectra at different pHs (6.5 and 8.0).
Spectrophotometric properties of 3 and 4
| 3 | 4 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| pH | 6.5 | 8.0 | 6.5 | 8.0 |
|
| 495 | 495 | 493 | 494 |
|
| 523 | 522 | 521 | 522 |
| Molar absorption coefficient @ | 43 107 | 67 302 | 56 970 | 73 519 |
| Quantum yield | 0.053 | 0.16 | 0.35 | 0.56 |
| Brightness | 2304 | 10 874 | 20 164 | 40 946 |
pH-dependent modification of reduced trastuzumab Fab by isothiocyanates 3 and 4. Incubation was conducted with tenfold excess of the dye at 37 °C for 90 mina
| Reduced Fab | Native Fab | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| pH = 6.5 | pH = 8.0 | pH = 6.5 | pH = 8.0 | |
| 3 | LC: 41%, single mod. | LC: 57%, single mod. | No mod. | 21% single mod. |
| HC: 36%, single mod. | HC: 64%, single mod. | |||
| 4 | LC: 89%, single mod. | LC: 100%, single mod. | No mod. | 8% single mod. |
| HC: 100%, single mod. | HC: 100%, single mod. | |||
LC and HC refer to the light chain and heavy chain of the Fab and yield of labelling was determined for the observed labelled/unlabelled LC/HC agents, respectively.
In this experiment a significant amount of reconjugated Fab was observed. However, full reduction was confirmed before, suggesting that only partial bioconjugation occured.
Fig. 4Stability of 4-labelled reduced Fab measured by LC-MS/MS in different pH conditions. Labelled LC/HC was incubated in acidic (pH = 6.8), physiologic (pH = 7.4) and basic (pH = 8.0) conditions and additionally at pH = 7.4 with GSH (5 μM).
Fig. 5Results of flow cytometry measurements on (a) HER2− and (b) HER2+ cells with 3- and (c) with 4-labelled trastuzumab. The colours are as follows: red for negative control to test autofluorescence, blue for FITC (3) dye labelled trastuzumab and green for FBITC (4) labelled trastuzumab.