AI Article Synopsis

  • Peptides are useful for targeting proteins but face challenges like low membrane permeability and instability inside cells.
  • Researchers developed a new fusion protein called PLIED, which uses a peptide to target proteins of interest and link them to small molecules that can easily enter cells.
  • This method allows for precise modifications of specific protein residues, demonstrated by acetylating MDM2 and histone proteins, thereby enhancing the capabilities of chemical biology tools for cellular applications.

Article Abstract

Peptides are privileged ligands for diverse biomacromolecules, including proteins; however, their utility is often limited due to low membrane permeability and in-cell instability. Here, we report peptide ligand-inserted eDHFR (PLIED) fusion protein as a universal adaptor for targeting proteins of interest (POI) with cell-permeable and stable synthetic functional small molecules (SFSM). PLIED binds to POI through the peptide moiety, properly orienting its eDHFR moiety, which then recruits trimethoprim (TMP)-conjugated SFSM to POI. Using a lysine-acylating BAHA catalyst as SFSM, we demonstrate that POI (MDM2 and chromatin histone) are post-translationally and synthetically acetylated at specific lysine residues. The residue-selectivity is predictable in an atomic resolution from molecular dynamics simulations of the POI/PLIED/TMP-BAHA (MTX was used as a TMP model) ternary complex. This designer adaptor approach universally enables functional conversion of impermeable peptide ligands to permeable small-molecule ligands, thus expanding the in-cell toolbox of chemical biology.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10683481PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscentsci.3c00930DOI Listing

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