Bifunctional Reagents for Formylglycine Conjugation: Pitfalls and Breakthroughs

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Abstract

Formylglycine-generating enzymes specifically oxidize cysteine within the consensus sequence CxPxR to Cα-formylglycine (FGly). This noncanonical electrophilic amino acid can subsequently be addressed selectively by bioorthogonal hydrazino-iso-Pictet-Spengler (HIPS) or Knoevenagel ligation to attach payloads like fluorophores or drugs to proteins to obtain a defined payload-to-protein ratio. However, the disadvantages of these conjugation techniques include the need for a large excess of conjugation building block, comparably low reaction rates and limited stability of FGly-containing proteins. Therefore, functionalized clickable HIPS and tandem Knoevenagel building blocks were synthesized, conjugated to small proteins (DARPins) and subsequently linked to strained alkyne-containing payloads for protein labeling. This procedure allowed the selective bioconjugation of one or two DBCO-carrying payloads with nearly stoichiometric amounts at low concentrations. Furthermore, an azide-modified tandem Knoevenagel building block enabled the synthesis of branched PEG linkers and the conjugation of two fluorophores, resulting in an improved signal-to-noise ratio in live-cell fluorescence-imaging experiments targeting the EGF receptor.

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Janson, N., Krüger, T., Karsten, L., Boschanski, M., Dierks, T., Müller, K. M., & Sewald, N. (2020). Bifunctional Reagents for Formylglycine Conjugation: Pitfalls and Breakthroughs. ChemBioChem, 21(24), 3580–3593. https://doi.org/10.1002/cbic.202000416

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