Chemical modification of proteins by insertion of synthetic peptides using tandem protein trans-splicing

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Abstract

Manipulation of proteins by chemical modification is a powerful way to decipher their function. However, most ribosome-dependent and semi-synthetic methods have limitations in the number and type of modifications that can be introduced, especially in live cells. Here, we present an approach to incorporate single or multiple post-translational modifications or non-canonical amino acids into proteins expressed in eukaryotic cells. We insert synthetic peptides into GFP, NaV1.5 and P2X2 receptors via tandem protein trans-splicing using two orthogonal split intein pairs and validate our approach by investigating protein function. We anticipate the approach will overcome some drawbacks of existing protein enigineering methods.

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Khoo, K. K., Galleano, I., Gasparri, F., Wieneke, R., Harms, H., Poulsen, M. H., … Pless, S. A. (2020). Chemical modification of proteins by insertion of synthetic peptides using tandem protein trans-splicing. Nature Communications, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-16208-6

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