Hydrocarbon constrained peptides-understanding preorganisation and binding affinity

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Abstract

The development of constrained peptides represents an emerging strategy to generate peptide based probes and hits for drug-discovery that address challenging protein-protein interactions (PPIs). In this manuscript we report on the use of a novel α-alkenylglycine derived amino acid to synthesise hydrocarbon constrained BH3-family sequences (BIM and BID). Our biophysical and structural analyses illustrate that whilst the introduction of the constraint increases the population of the bioactive α-helical conformation of the peptide in solution, it does not enhance the inhibitory potency against pro-apoptotic Bcl-xL and Mcl-1 PPIs. SPR analyses indicate binding occurs via an induced fit mechanism whilst X-ray analyses illustrate none of the key interactions between the helix and protein are disturbed. The behaviour derives from enthalpy-entropy compensation which may be considered in terms of the ground state energies of the unbound constrained and unconstrained peptides; this has implications for the design of preorganised peptides to target protein-protein interactions.

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Miles, J. A., Yeo, D. J., Rowell, P., Rodriguez-Marin, S., Pask, C. M., Warriner, S. L., … Wilson, A. J. (2016). Hydrocarbon constrained peptides-understanding preorganisation and binding affinity. Chemical Science, 7(6), 3694–3702. https://doi.org/10.1039/c5sc04048e

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