Title of article :
Topochemistry for preparing ligands that dimerize receptors Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Mary E. McGrath and Bradley A. Katz، نويسنده , , Robert M. Stroud، نويسنده , , Nathan Collins، نويسنده , , Beishan Liu، نويسنده , , Rafael Arze، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1995
Pages :
10
From page :
591
To page :
600
Abstract :
Background: The cyclic, disulfide-containing peptide cyclo-Ac-[Cys-His-Pro-Gln-Gly-Pro-Pro-Cys]-NH2, binds to streptavidin with high affinity. In streptavidin-peptide cocrystals of space group 1222, cyclic peptide monomers are bound on adjacent streptavidin tetramers related by a crystallographic two-fold symmetry axis. We set out to determine whether the disulfide bonds of the peptide, presented close to one another in the crystal, could undergo disulfide interchange to form a dimer. Results: When juxtaposed, the disulfides of neighboring peptides undergo disulfide interchange, breaking and forming covalent disulfide bonds, to produce a peptide dimer adopting the symmetry of the crystal. This is the first example of a chemical transformation mediated by a protein crystal lattice. The structure of the streptavidin-bound monomer, and that of the dimer that was eventually produced from it in the crystal, were both determined from the same single crystal studied at different times. The two-fold symmetric peptide dimer was independently synthesized and shown to form crystals of dimerized streptavidin. Conclusions: We have shown that formation of a covalently linked peptide dimer can be mediated by a protein crystal lattice. The dimer thus produced dimerizes its target, streptavidin, suggesting that solid-state (or topochemical) reactions of this kind may be broadly useful for the preparation of ligands that can dimerize other protein targets.
Keywords :
* dimerization , * phage display , * topochemistry , * structure-based design
Journal title :
Chemistry and Biology
Serial Year :
1995
Journal title :
Chemistry and Biology
Record number :
1157716
Link To Document :
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