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

  • Alexander J. Lander
  • , Yifu Kong
  • , Yi Jin
  • , Chuanliu Wu
  • , Louis Y. P. Luk

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

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.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)68-76
Number of pages9
JournalACS Bio & Med Chem Au
Volume4
Issue number1
Early online date11 Dec 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 21 Feb 2024

Keywords

  • Chemical protein synthesis
  • D-peptide
  • D-protein
  • cysteine-rich protein
  • mirror-image phage display
  • protein folding
  • racemic protein crystallography

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