Issue 14, 2018

Dithioamide substitutions in proteins: effects on thermostability, peptide binding, and fluorescence quenching in calmodulin

Abstract

Thioamide substitutions in the backbones of proteins can modulate their structure and thermostability, or serve as spectroscopic probes in fluorescence quenching experiments. Using native chemical ligation, we have produced the first examples of a protein (calmodulin) containing two thioamides. Dithioamide variants were made to explore the effects of combining stabilizing, neutral, and destabilizing single thioamide substitutions. One of the dithioamide calmodulin variants exhibited stabilization greater than any monothioamide variant, although the effect could not easily be anticipated from the results of single substitutions. Each of the calmodulin variants retained the ability to bind a target peptide, and the dithioamide proteins exhibited an increase in fluorescence quenching of tryptophan relative to their single thioamide counterparts. These results show that multiply thioamidated proteins can be synthesized, and that properly placed thioamides can be used to increase protein thermostability or enhance fluorecsence quenching in peptide binding experiments.

Graphical abstract: Dithioamide substitutions in proteins: effects on thermostability, peptide binding, and fluorescence quenching in calmodulin

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
05 Jan 2018
Accepted
24 Jan 2018
First published
31 Jan 2018

Chem. Commun., 2018,54, 1766-1769

Dithioamide substitutions in proteins: effects on thermostability, peptide binding, and fluorescence quenching in calmodulin

C. R. Walters, J. J. Ferrie and E. J. Petersson, Chem. Commun., 2018, 54, 1766 DOI: 10.1039/C8CC00104A

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