1. Engineering of a Peptide α-N-Methyltransferase to Methylate Non-Proteinogenic Amino Acids.
- Author
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Song H, Burton AJ, Shirran SL, Fahrig-Kamarauskaitė J, Kaspar H, Muir TW, Künzler M, and Naismith JH
- Subjects
- Amides chemistry, Amides metabolism, Amino Acids chemistry, Methylation, Methyltransferases chemistry, Peptides chemistry, Protein Conformation, Amino Acids metabolism, Methyltransferases metabolism, Peptides metabolism, Protein Engineering
- Abstract
Introduction of α-N-methylated non-proteinogenic amino acids into peptides can improve their biological activities, membrane permeability and proteolytic stability. This is commonly achieved, in nature and in the lab, by assembling pre-methylated amino acids. The more appealing route of methylating amide bonds is challenging. Biology has evolved an α-N-automethylating enzyme, OphMA, which acts on the amide bonds of peptides fused to its C-terminus. Due to the ribosomal biosynthesis of its substrate, the activity of this enzyme towards peptides with non-proteinogenic amino acids has not been addressed. An engineered OphMA, intein-mediated protein ligation and solid-phase peptide synthesis have allowed us to demonstrate the methylation of amide bonds in the context of non-natural amides. This approach may have application in the biotechnological production of therapeutic peptides., (© 2021 The Authors. Angewandte Chemie International Edition published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
- Published
- 2021
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