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Bypassing the ribosome: peptide synthesis without translation.

Authors :
Murphy A
O Fágáin C
Source :
Essays in biochemistry [Essays Biochem] 1996; Vol. 31, pp. 61-75.
Publication Year :
1996

Abstract

Chemical peptide synthesis is well-established but has drawbacks, notably the need to protect side-chain functional groups during reactions. Proteolytic enzymes may be used 'in reverse' to catalyse peptide synthesis without side-chain protection and avoiding the danger of racemization. Enzymic syntheses may use either an equilibrium or a kinetic strategy. Equilibrium synthesis is simply the reversal of hydrolysis, using any type of protease. Kinetic synthesis involves time-dependent acyl transfer using activated substrates and a serine or cysteine protease. Enzymic synthesis often takes place in partially aqueous or non-aqueous reaction media; the medium can often desirably influence the protease's properties. It is possible to tailor a protease to improve its usefulness in peptide synthesis; one can alter the enzyme's properties by means such as chemical modification, PEG-coupling or protein engineering.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0071-1365
Volume :
31
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Essays in biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9078458