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Oxidative folding of cystine‐rich peptides vs regioselective cysteine pairing strategies
Author(s) -
Moroder Luis,
Besse Dörthe,
Musiol HansJürgen,
RudolphBöhner Sabine,
Siedler Frank
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
peptide science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.556
H-Index - 125
eISSN - 1097-0282
pISSN - 0006-3525
DOI - 10.1002/(sici)1097-0282(1996)40:2<207::aid-bip2>3.0.co;2-#
Subject(s) - oxidative folding , chemistry , cysteine , cystine , peptide , oxidative phosphorylation , protein folding , folding (dsp implementation) , subtilisin , biochemistry , native chemical ligation , combinatorial chemistry , biophysics , enzyme , electrical engineering , biology , engineering
The methodology of regioselective cysteine pairings in synthetic multiple‐cystine peptides has progressed in the past years to an efficiency that allows for at least three specific inter‐ and intrachain disulfide bridgings. Conformational studies on various multiple‐cystine peptides like hormones, protease inhibitors, and toxins revealed that these bioactive peptides, generated by posttranslational processing of precursor proteins, are folded into miniprotein‐like compact globular structures of remarkable stability. This strongly suggests protein domain or subdomain properties of these families of peptides, and thus sufficient sequence‐encoded information for correct oxidative refolding under appropriate experimental conditions. From intensive research on the mechanisms and pathways of oxidative refolding of proteins in vivo and in vitro, the efficient methods have emerged for simulating nature in the regeneration of native folds not only for intact proteins, but also for protein domains and subdomains. In fact, the results obtained in the oxidative folding of excised protein fragments and of relatively low mass products of posttranslational processings show that this procedure is indeed a simple way of preparing peptides with several disulfide bonds, if optimization of reaction conditions is performed in terms of redox buffer, temperature, and additives capable of disrupting aggregates and of stabilizing nascent secondary structures. Moreover, with increased knowledge about stable, small natural cystine frameworks, their use instead of artificial templates should facilitate engineering of synthetic miniproteins with specific conformation and tailored functions. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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