Synthesis and Macrodomain Binding of Gln‐carba‐ADPr‐peptide

Author:

Engelsma Sander B.1,Nardozza Aurelio Pio2,de Saint Aulaire Pieter1,Overkleeft Herman S.1,van der Marel Gijsbert A.1,Ladurner Andreas G.234,Filippov Dmitri V.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Gorlaeus Laboratories Leiden Institute of Chemistry Faculty of Science Einsteinweg 55 2333 CC Leiden the Netherlands

2. Department of Physiological Chemistry Biomedical Center Faculty of Medicine Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München Großhaderner Street 9 82152 Planegg-Martinsried, Germany

3. Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich (CIPSM) Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München Butenandt Street 5–13 81377 Munich Germany

4. Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology (SyNergy) Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München Feodor Lynen Street 17 81377 Munich Germany

Abstract

AbstractMono‐ADP‐ribosylation is a dynamic post‐translational modification (PTM) with important roles in cell signalling. This modification occurs on a wide variety of amino acids, and one of the canonical modification sites within proteins is the side chain of glutamic acid. Given the transient nature of this modification (acylal linkage) and the high sensitivity of ADP‐ribosylated glutamic acid, stabilized isosteres are required for structural and biochemical studies. Here, we report the synthesis of a mimic of ADP‐ribosylated peptide derived from histone H2B that contains carba‐ADP‐ribosylated glutamine as a potential mimic for Glu‐ADPr. We synthesized a cyclopentitol‐ribofuranosyl derivative of 5′‐phosphoribosylated Fmoc‐glutamine and used this in the solid‐phase synthesis of the carba‐ADPr‐peptide mimicking the ADP‐ribosylated N‐terminal tail of histone H2B. Binding studies with isothermal calorimetry demonstrate that the macrodomains of human MacroD2 and TARG1 bind to carba‐ADPr‐peptide in the same way as ADPr‐peptides containing the native ADP‐riboside moiety connected to the side chain of glutamine in the same peptide sequence.

Publisher

Wiley

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