2025-11-21T11:30:17Z
2025-11-21T11:30:17Z
2024-10-30
Native chemical ligation (NCL) ligates two unprotected peptides in an aqueous buffer. One of the fragments features a C-terminal α-thioester functional group, and the second bears an N-terminal cysteine. The reaction mechanism depicts two steps: an intermolecular thiol–thioester exchange resulting in a transient thioester, followed by an intramolecular S-to-N acyl shift to yield the final native peptide bond. Although this mechanism is well established, the direct observation of the transient thioester has been elusive because the fast intramolecular rearrangement prevents its accumulation. Here, the use of α-selenoester peptides allows a faster first reaction and an early buildup of the intermediate, enabling its quantification and the kinetic monitoring of the first and second steps. The results show a correlation between the steric hindrance in the α-thioester residue and the rearrangement rate. In bulky residues, the S-to-N acyl shift has a significant contribution to the overall reaction rate. This is particularly notable for valine and likely for other similar β-branched amino acids.
Article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publisherVersion
English
Cinètica química; Síntesi proteica; Pèptids; Chemical kinetics; Protein synthesis; Peptides
ACS Publications
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1021/jacsau.4c00705
JACS Au 2024, vol. 4, pp. 4374−4382
cc by-nc-nd (c) Sánchez Campillo, Iván et al., 2024
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/