Abstract

Chemical synthesis of complex peptides and proteins continues to play increasingly important roles in industry and academia, where strategies for covalent ligation of two or more peptide fragments to produce longer peptides and proteins in convergent manners have become critical. In recent decades, efficient and site-selective ligation strategies mediated by exploiting the biocatalytic capacity of nature's diverse toolkit (i.e., enzymes) have been widely recognized as a powerful extension of existing chemical strategies. In this review, we present a chronological overview of the development of proteases, transpeptidases, transglutaminases, and ubiquitin ligases. We survey the different properties between the ligation reactions of various enzymes, including the selectivity and efficiency of the reaction, the ligation "scar" left in the product, the type of amide bond formed (natural or isopeptide), the synthetic availability of the reactants, and whether the enzymes are orthogonal to another. This review also describes how the inherent specificity of these enzymes can be exploited for peptide and protein ligation.

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