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Design and Combinatorial Development of Shield-1 Peptide Mimetics Binding to Destabilized FKBP12
Author(s) -
Daniel H. Madsen,
Frederik Præstholm Jørgensen,
Daniel Palmer,
Milena E. Roux,
Jakob Vesterlund Olsen,
Mikael Bols,
Sanne Schoffelen,
Frederik Diness,
Morten Meldal
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs combinatorial science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.928
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 2156-8952
pISSN - 2156-8944
DOI - 10.1021/acscombsci.9b00197
Subject(s) - chemistry , tripeptide , peptide , combinatorial chemistry , peptide library , small molecule , scaffold , fluorescence anisotropy , fluorescence , drug discovery , computational biology , biophysics , peptide sequence , biochemistry , computer science , physics , quantum mechanics , database , membrane , biology , gene
On the basis of computational design, a focused one-bead one-compound library has been prepared on microparticle-encoded PEGA 1900 beads consisting of small tripeptides with a triazole-capped N -terminal. The library was screened towards a double point-mutated version of the human FKBP12 protein, known as the destabilizing domain (DD). Inspired by the decoded library hits, unnatural peptide structures were screened in a novel on-bead assay, which was useful for a rapid structure evaluation prior to off-bead resynthesis. Subsequently, a series of 19 compounds were prepared and tested using a competitive fluorescence polarization assay, which led to the discovery of peptide ligands with low micromolar binding affinity towards the DD. The methodology represents a rapid approach for identification of a novel structure scaffold, where the screening and initial structure refinement was accomplished using small quantities of library building blocks.

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