Abstract

Strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloadditions (SPAAC) have proven extremely useful for labeling of biomolecules, but typically produce isomeric mixtures. This is not appropriate for the formation of bioactive molecules in living cells. Here, the first use of SPAAC for the isomer-free synthesis of a bioactive molecule is reported both in vitro and inside cultured cells. We developed the symmetrical cyclooctyne SYPCO and used it for the generation of a chemically uniform triazole inhibitor of protein-protein interactions mediated by Bcl-xL via isomer-free SPAAC (iSPAAC). Tumor cells treated with the reactants of the iSPAAC reaction contained higher concentrations of triazole, and displayed higher apoptosis levels, than cells treated with pre-synthesized triazole. We envision iSPAAC as a broadly applicable method for modulating intracellular targets with organic molecules with molecular weights prohibitively large for cellular uptake, via smaller and thus more cell-permeable components.

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