[Report] A chemical biology route to site-specific authentic protein modifications

Thursday, November 3, 2016 - 15:22 in Physics & Chemistry

Many essential biological processes are controlled by posttranslational protein modifications. The inability to synthetically attain the diversity enabled by these modifications limits functional studies of many proteins. We designed a three-step approach for installing authentic posttranslational modifications in recombinant proteins. We first use the established O-phosphoserine (Sep) orthogonal translation system to create a Sep-containing recombinant protein. The Sep residue is then dephosphorylated to dehydroalanine (Dha). Last, conjugate addition of alkyl iodides to Dha, promoted by zinc and copper, enables chemoselective carbon-carbon bond formation. To validate our approach, we produced histone H3, ubiquitin, and green fluorescent protein variants with site-specific modifications, including different methylations of H3K79. The methylated histones stimulate transcription through histone acetylation. This approach offers a powerful tool to engineer diverse designer proteins. Authors: Aerin Yang, Sura Ha, Jihye Ahn, Rira Kim, Sungyoon Kim, Younghoon Lee, Jaehoon Kim, Dieter Söll, Hee-Yoon Lee, Hee-Sung Park

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