Backbone‐Installed Split Intein‐Assisted Ligation for the Chemical Synthesis of Mirror‐Image Proteins

Author:

Zhang Baochang1,Zheng Yupeng1,Chu Guochao1,Deng Xiangyu1,Wang Tongyue1,Shi Weiwei1,Zhou Yongkang2,Tang Shan2,Zheng Ji‐Shen2ORCID,Liu Lei1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Tsinghua-Peking Center for Life Sciences Ministry of Education Key Laboratory of Bioorganic Phosphorus Chemistry and Chemical Biology Center for Synthetic and Systems Biology Department of Chemistry Tsinghua University Beijing 100084 China

2. The First Affiliated Hospital of USTC MOE Key Laboratory of Cellular Dynamics and Division of Life Sciences and Medicine Hefei National Research Center for Physical Sciences at the Microscale University of Science and Technology of China Hefei Anhui 230001 China

Abstract

AbstractMembrane‐associated D‐proteins are an important class of synthetic molecules needed for D‐peptide drug discovery, but their chemical synthesis using canonical ligation methods such as native chemical ligation is often hampered by the poor solubility of their constituent peptide segments. Here, we describe a Backbone‐Installed Split Intein‐Assisted Ligation (BISIAL) method for the synthesis of these proteins, wherein the native L‐forms of the N‐ and C‐intein fragments of the unique consensus‐fast (Cfa) (i.e. L–CfaN and L–CfaC) are separately installed onto the two D‐peptide segments to be ligated via a removable backbone modification. The ligation proceeds smoothly at micromolar (μM) concentrations under strongly chaotropic conditions (8.0 M urea), and the subsequent removal of the backbone modification groups affords the desired D‐proteins without leaving any “ligation scar” on the products. The effectiveness and practicality of the BISIAL method are exemplified by the synthesis of the D‐enantiomers of the extracellular domains of T cell immunoglobulin and ITIM domain (TIGIT) and tropomyosin receptor kinase C (TrkC). The BISIAL method further expands the chemical protein synthesis ligation toolkit and provides practical access to challenging D‐protein targets.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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