Uranyl Photocleavage of Phosphopeptides Yields Truncated C-Terminally Amidated Peptide Products

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Abstract

The uranyl ion (UO22+) binds phosphopeptides with high affinity, and when irradiated with UV-light, it can cleave the peptide backbone. In this study, high-accuracy tandem mass spectrometry and enzymatic assays were used to characterise the photocleavage products resulting from the uranyl photocleavage reaction of a tetraphosphorylated β-casein model peptide. We show that the primary photocleavage products of the uranyl-catalysed reaction are C-terminally amidated. This could be of great interest to the pharmaceutical industry, as efficient peptide amidation reactions are one of the top challenges in green pharmaceutical chemistry.

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Elnegaard, R. L. B., Møllegaard, N. E., Zhang, Q., Kjeldsen, F., & Jørgensen, T. J. D. (2017). Uranyl Photocleavage of Phosphopeptides Yields Truncated C-Terminally Amidated Peptide Products. ChemBioChem, 18(12), 1117–1122. https://doi.org/10.1002/cbic.201700103

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