Rapid assembly and profiling of an anticoagulant sulfoprotein library

Author:

Watson Emma E.ORCID,Ripoll-Rozada JorgeORCID,Lee Ashley C.ORCID,Wu Mike C. L.ORCID,Franck CharlotteORCID,Pasch TimORCID,Premdjee BhaveshORCID,Sayers JessicaORCID,Pinto Maria F.ORCID,Martins Pedro M.ORCID,Jackson Shaun P.ORCID,Pereira Pedro José BarbosaORCID,Payne Richard J.ORCID

Abstract

Hematophagous organisms produce a suite of salivary proteins which interact with the host’s coagulation machinery to facilitate the acquisition and digestion of a bloodmeal. Many of these biomolecules inhibit the central blood-clotting serine proteinase thrombin that is also the target of several clinically approved anticoagulants. Here a bioinformatics approach is used to identify seven tick proteins with putative thrombin inhibitory activity that we predict to be posttranslationally sulfated at two conserved tyrosine residues. To corroborate the biological role of these molecules and investigate the effects of amino acid sequence and sulfation modifications on thrombin inhibition and anticoagulant activity, a library of 34 homogeneously sulfated protein variants were rapidly assembled using one-pot diselenide-selenoester ligation (DSL)-deselenization chemistry. Downstream functional characterization validated the thrombin-directed activity of all target molecules and revealed that posttranslational sulfation of specific tyrosine residues crucially modulates potency. Importantly, access to this homogeneously modified protein library not only enabled the determination of key structure–activity relationships and the identification of potent anticoagulant leads, but also revealed subtleties in the mechanism of thrombin inhibition, between and within the families, that would be impossible to predict from the amino acid sequence alone. The synthetic platform described here therefore serves as a highly valuable tool for the generation and thorough characterization of libraries of related peptide and/or protein molecules (with or without modifications) for the identification of lead candidates for medicinal chemistry programs.

Funder

Department of Health | National Health and Medical Research Council

EC | European Regional Development Fund

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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