TY - JOUR
T1 - Deciphering the Synthetic and Refolding Strategy of a Cysteine-Rich Domain in the Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor (TNF-R) for Racemic Crystallography Analysis and d-Peptide Ligand Discovery
AU - Lander, Alexander J.
AU - Kong, Yifu
AU - Jin, Yi
AU - Wu, Chuanliu
AU - Luk, Louis Y. P.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.
PY - 2024/2/21
Y1 - 2024/2/21
N2 - Many cell-surface receptors are promising targets for chemical synthesis because of their critical roles in disease development. This synthetic approach enables investigations by racemic protein crystallography and ligand discovery by mirror-image methodologies. However, due to their complex nature, the chemical synthesis of a receptor can be a significant challenge. Here, we describe the chemical synthesis and folding of a central, cysteine-rich domain of the cell-surface receptor tumor necrosis factor 1 which is integral to binding of the cytokine TNF-α, namely, TNFR-1 CRD2. Racemic protein crystallography at 1.4 Å confirmed that the native binding conformation was preserved, and TNFR-1 CRD2 maintained its capacity to bind to TNF-α (K
D ≈ 7 nM). Encouraged by this discovery, we carried out mirror-image phage display using the enantiomeric receptor mimic and identified a D-peptide ligand for TNFR-1 CRD2 (K
D = 1 μM). This work demonstrated that cysteine-rich domains, including the central domains, can be chemically synthesized and used as mimics for investigations.
AB - Many cell-surface receptors are promising targets for chemical synthesis because of their critical roles in disease development. This synthetic approach enables investigations by racemic protein crystallography and ligand discovery by mirror-image methodologies. However, due to their complex nature, the chemical synthesis of a receptor can be a significant challenge. Here, we describe the chemical synthesis and folding of a central, cysteine-rich domain of the cell-surface receptor tumor necrosis factor 1 which is integral to binding of the cytokine TNF-α, namely, TNFR-1 CRD2. Racemic protein crystallography at 1.4 Å confirmed that the native binding conformation was preserved, and TNFR-1 CRD2 maintained its capacity to bind to TNF-α (K
D ≈ 7 nM). Encouraged by this discovery, we carried out mirror-image phage display using the enantiomeric receptor mimic and identified a D-peptide ligand for TNFR-1 CRD2 (K
D = 1 μM). This work demonstrated that cysteine-rich domains, including the central domains, can be chemically synthesized and used as mimics for investigations.
KW - Chemical protein synthesis
KW - D-peptide
KW - D-protein
KW - cysteine-rich protein
KW - mirror-image phage display
KW - protein folding
KW - racemic protein crystallography
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85180081137
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/cb50c3d7-3613-3448-8f05-68254e7a7fea/
U2 - 10.1021/acsbiomedchemau.3c00060
DO - 10.1021/acsbiomedchemau.3c00060
M3 - Article
C2 - 38404743
VL - 4
SP - 68
EP - 76
JO - ACS Bio & Med Chem Au
JF - ACS Bio & Med Chem Au
IS - 1
ER -