Site-Specific Labeling of Endogenous Proteins Using CoLDR Chemistry
Author(s) -
Rambabu Reddi,
Adi Rogel,
Efrat Resnick,
Ronen Gabizon,
Pragati K. Prasad,
Neta Gurwicz,
Haim Barr,
Ziv Shulman,
Nir London
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.1c06167
Subject(s) - chemistry , bruton's tyrosine kinase , covalent bond , proteolysis , ligand (biochemistry) , target protein , chemical biology , protein engineering , biophysics , fluorescence , biochemistry , chimera (genetics) , combinatorial chemistry , computational biology , signal transduction , receptor , enzyme , biology , gene , physics , organic chemistry , tyrosine kinase , quantum mechanics
Chemical modifications of native proteins can affect their stability, activity, interactions, localization, and more. However, there are few nongenetic methods for the installation of chemical modifications at a specific protein site in cells. Here we report a covalent ligand directed release (CoLDR) site-specific labeling strategy, which enables the installation of a variety of functional tags on a target protein while releasing the directing ligand. Using this approach, we were able to label various proteins such as BTK, K-Ras G12C , and SARS-CoV-2 PL pro with different tags. For BTK we have shown selective labeling in cells of both alkyne and fluorophores tags. Protein labeling by traditional affinity methods often inhibits protein activity since the directing ligand permanently occupies the target binding pocket. We have shown that using CoLDR chemistry, modification of BTK by these probes in cells preserves its activity. We demonstrated several applications for this approach including determining the half-life of BTK in its native environment with minimal perturbation, as well as quantification of BTK degradation by a noncovalent proteolysis targeting chimera (PROTAC) by in-gel fluorescence. Using an environment-sensitive "turn-on" fluorescent probe, we were able to monitor ligand binding to the active site of BTK. Finally, we have demonstrated efficient CoLDR-based BTK PROTACs (DC 50 < 100 nM), which installed a CRBN binder onto BTK. This approach joins very few available labeling strategies that maintain the target protein activity and thus makes an important addition to the toolbox of chemical biology.
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