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Aqueous synthesis of a small-molecule lanthanide chelator amenable to copper-free click chemistry
Author(s) -
Stephen H. Bishop,
Robert D. Winefield,
Asokan Anbanandam,
Jed N. Lampe
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0209726
Subject(s) - click chemistry , chemistry , chelation , combinatorial chemistry , lanthanide , moiety , amine gas treating , aqueous solution , bioconjugation , reagent , organic chemistry , ion
The lanthanides (Ln 3+ ), or rare earth elements, have proven to be useful tools for biomolecular NMR, X-ray crystallographic, and fluorescence analyses due to their unique 4 f orbitals. However, their utility in biological applications has been limited because site-specific incorporation of a chelating element is required to ensure efficient binding of the free Ln 3+ ion. Additionally, current Ln 3+ chelator syntheses complicate efforts to directly incorporate Ln 3+ chelators into proteins as the multi-step processes and a reliance on organic solvents promote protein denaturation and aggregation which are generally incompatible with direct incorporation into the protein of interest. To overcome these limitations, herein we describe a two-step aqueous synthesis of a small molecule lanthanide chelating agent amenable to site-specific incorporation into a protein using copper-free click chemistry with unnatural amino acids. The bioconjugate combines a diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA) chelating moiety with a clickable dibenzylcyclooctyne-amine (DBCO-amine) to facilitate the reaction with an azide containing unnatural amino acid. Incorporating the DBCO-amine avoids the use of the cytotoxic Cu 2+ ion as a catalyst. The clickable lanthanide chelator (CLC) reagent reacted readily with p -azidophenylalanine (paF) without the need of a copper catalyst, thereby demonstrating proof-of-concept. Implementation of the orthogonal click chemistry reaction has the added advantage that the chelator can be used directly in a protein labeling reaction, without the need of extensive purification. Given the inherent advantages of Cu 2+ -free click chemistry, aqueous synthesis, and facile labeling, we believe that the CLC will find abundant use in both structural and biophysical studies of proteins and their complexes.

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