Prebiotic synthesis of cysteine peptides that catalyze peptide ligation in neutral water

Peptide biosynthesis is performed by ribosomes and several other classes of enzymes, but a simple chemical synthesis may have created the first peptides at the origins of life. α-Aminonitriles-prebiotic α-amino acid precursors-are generally produced by Strecker reactions. However, cysteine's am...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 2020-11, Vol.370 (6518), p.865-869
Hauptverfasser: Foden, Callum S, Islam, Saidul, Fernández-García, Christian, Maugeri, Leonardo, Sheppard, Tom D, Powner, Matthew W
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Peptide biosynthesis is performed by ribosomes and several other classes of enzymes, but a simple chemical synthesis may have created the first peptides at the origins of life. α-Aminonitriles-prebiotic α-amino acid precursors-are generally produced by Strecker reactions. However, cysteine's aminothiol is incompatible with nitriles. Consequently, cysteine nitrile is not stable, and cysteine has been proposed to be a product of evolution, not prebiotic chemistry. We now report a high-yielding, prebiotic synthesis of cysteine peptides. Our biomimetic pathway converts serine to cysteine by nitrile-activated dehydroalanine synthesis. We also demonstrate that -acylcysteines catalyze peptide ligation, directly coupling kinetically stable-but energy-rich-α-amidonitriles to proteinogenic amines. This rare example of selective and efficient organocatalysis in water implicates cysteine as both catalyst and precursor in prebiotic peptide synthesis.
ISSN:0036-8075
1095-9203
DOI:10.1126/science.abd5680