Synthesis and Biological Activity of Photoactivatable N-Ras Peptides and Proteins

A modular strategy for the assembly of farnesylated N-Ras heptapeptides carrying a photoactivatable benzophenone (BP) group within the lipid residue is described. This strategy is based on the fragment condensation of a N-terminal hexapeptide synthesized on the solid support with a cysteine methyl e...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2003-10, Vol.125 (42), p.12749-12758
Hauptverfasser: Völkert, Martin, Uwai, Koji, Tebbe, Andreas, Popkirova, Boriana, Wagner, Melanie, Kuhlmann, Jürgen, Waldmann, Herbert
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A modular strategy for the assembly of farnesylated N-Ras heptapeptides carrying a photoactivatable benzophenone (BP) group within the lipid residue is described. This strategy is based on the fragment condensation of a N-terminal hexapeptide synthesized on the solid support with a cysteine methyl ester which is modified with different farnesyl analogues, incorporating the photophor. At the N-terminus of the peptides different functional groups can be attached, e.g., biotin for product enrichment and detection after photoactivation or a maleimido (MIC) linker, allowing for the coupling to proteins carrying a C-terminal free cysteine. Using this strategy, 24 peptides were synthesized, incorporating farnesyl analogues with four different chain lengths. Two of these photoactivatable conjugates were ligated to oncogenic human N-RasG12VΔ181. A cellular transformation assay revealed that the semisynthetic proteins retain their biological activity despite the photolabel. The first photolabeling experiments with a geranyl-BP-labeled N-Ras construct and the farnesyl-sensitive guanine nucleotide exchange factor hSos1 indicate that this photoaffinity labeling system can be particularly useful for studying protein−protein interactions, e.g., the participation of the farnesyl group in Ras signaling, which is still discussed with controversy.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/ja036178d