Abstract
Proteinopathies are protein misfolding diseases that have an underlying factor that affects the conformation of proteoforms. A factor hypothesised to play a role in these diseases is the incorporation of non-protein amino acids into proteins, with a key example being the therapeutic drug levodopa. The presence of levodopa as a protein constituent has been explored in several studies, but it has not been examined in a global proteomic manner. This paper provides a proof-of-concept method for enzymatically creating levodopa-containing proteins using the enzyme tyrosinase and provides spectral evidence of in vitro incorporation in addition to the induction of the unfolded protein response due to levodopa.
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Steele, J. R., Strange, N., Rodgers, K. J., & Padula, M. P. (2021). A novel method for creating a synthetic l-dopa proteome and in vitro evidence of incorporation. Proteomes, 9(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/proteomes9020024
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