Abstract

Conjugating small-molecule ligands to synthetic motifs that can localize to specific organelles or membranes in living cells is a practical approach to develop compounds as chimeric tools or drugs that can manipulate biological processes in a subcellular site-specific manner. However, the number of available organelle-targeted synthetic motifs for small-molecule localization is limited. We have recently developed a synthetic myristoyl-DCys motif for small-molecule localization that undergoes S-palmitoylation via the cellular palmitoylation machinery and localizes to the Golgi surface. Herein, we show that the lipid acyl chain of the myristoyl (C14)-DCys motif can be as short as 10-carbons and still retain the palmitoylation-dependent Golgi localization property in cells. This discovery led to the identification of four new derivatives for small-molecule localization: tridecanoyl (C13)-, dodecanoyl (C12)-, undecanoyl (C11)-, and decanoyl (C10)-DCys motifs. We demonstrated that even the short decanoyl-DCys palmitoylation motif could be used to generate small-molecule ligand conjugates that functioned as chemical tools for controlling protein localization and cell signaling. The miniaturized synthetic palmitoylation motifs identified in this work may find applications in creating various Golgi-localizable chimeric molecules for use in chemical biology and drug development.

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