A variety of oligomeric backbones with compositions deviating from biomacromolecules can fold in defined ways. Termed "foldamers," these agents have diverse potential applications. A number of protein-inspired secondary structures (e.g., helices, sheets) have been produced from unnatural backbones, yet examples of tertiary folds combining several secondary structural elements in a single entity are rare. One promising strategy to address this challenge is the systematic backbone alteration of natural protein sequences, through which a subset of the native side chains is displayed on an unnatural building block to generate a heterogeneous backbone. A drawback to this approach is that substitution at more than one or two sites often comes at a significant energetic cost to fold stability. Here we report heterogeneous-backbone foldamers that mimic the zinc finger domain, a ubiquitous and biologically important metal-binding tertiary motif, and do so with a folded stability that is superior to the natural protein on which their design is based. A combination of UV-vis spectroscopy, isothermal titration calorimetry, and multidimensional NMR reveals that suitably designed oligomers with >20% modified backbones can form native-like tertiary folds with metal-binding environments identical to the prototype sequence (the third finger of specificity factor 1) and enhanced thermodynamic stability. These results expand the scope of heterogeneous-backbone foldamer design to a new tertiary structure class and show that judiciously applied backbone modification can be accompanied by improvement to fold stability.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.7b03114 | DOI Listing |
Biopolymers
June 2019
Department of Chemistry and Division of Advanced Material Science, Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH), Pohang, South Korea.
Peptoids, oligomers of N-substituted glycines, have been attracting increasing interest due to their advantageous properties as peptidomimetics. However, due to the lack of chiral centers and amide hydrogen atoms, peptoids, in general, do not form folding structures except that they have α-chiral side chains. We have recently developed "peptoids with backbone chirality" as a new class of peptoid foldamers called α-ABpeptoids and demonstrated that they could have folding conformations owing to the methyl groups on chiral α-carbons in the backbone structure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChembiochem
January 2019
Department of Chemistry, University of Pittsburgh, 219 Parkman Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA, 15260, USA.
Disulfide-rich peptides have found widespread use in the development of bioactive agents; however, low proteolytic stability and the difficulty of exerting synthetic control over chain topology present barriers to their application in some systems. Herein, we report a method that enables the creation of artificial backbone ("foldamer") mimics of compact, disulfide-rich tertiary folds. Systematic replacement of a subset of natural α-residues with various artificial building blocks in the context of a computationally designed prototype sequence leads to "heterogeneous-backbone" variants that undergo clean oxidative folding, adopt tertiary structures indistinguishable from that of the prototype, and enjoy proteolytic protection beyond that inherent to the topologically constrained scaffold.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcc Chem Res
May 2018
Department of Chemistry , University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania 15260 , United States.
The prospect of recreating the complex structural hierarchy of protein folding in synthetic oligomers with backbones that are artificial in covalent structure ("foldamers") has long fascinated chemists. Foldamers offer complex functions from biostable scaffolds and have found widespread applications in fields from biomedical to materials science. Most precedent has focused on isolated secondary structures or their assemblies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
June 2017
Department of Chemistry, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260, United States.
A variety of oligomeric backbones with compositions deviating from biomacromolecules can fold in defined ways. Termed "foldamers," these agents have diverse potential applications. A number of protein-inspired secondary structures (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Commun (Camb)
October 2010
Organic Division-I, Indian Institute of Chemical Technology (CSIR), Uppal Road, Tarnaka, Hyderabad-500 607 (AP), India.
Secondary structural conformation of hybrid oligo-peptides comprised of 1 : 1 alternating Nucleoside Derived beta-Amino acid (NDA) and l-amino acid residues has been reported. The studies reveal that the NDA residues organize the heterogeneous backbone featuring the surface properties of both nucleic acids and peptides, to adopt a novel 11/8-helical fold.
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