Abstract

Native chemical ligation (NCL) approaches have been applied extensively to soluble proteins. Fewer successes have been achieved with membrane peptides. In this report, the synthesis and semisynthesis by NCL of peptides corresponding to 1.7 transmembrane domains of the α-factor receptor from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is described. Synthesis was achieved when the ligation point was approximately in the middle of the loop joining the two transmembrane regions. In contrast, little to no ligation was observed when the ligation point was at the putative membrane interface of the sixth transmembrane domain (TM6) and the third extracellular loop (EL3). Ligations of a chemically synthesized 22-residue thioester with a synthetic 29-residue N-Cys peptide and a biosynthetic 73-residue N-Cys peptide were successfully achieved in both trifluoroethanol/guanidinium hydrochloride (TFE/GnHCl) and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) media when mercaptoethanesulfonic acid (MESNA) was used as a catalyst. The resulting 51-residue and 95-residue ligation products were purified by reversed phase HPLC and recovered on a mg scale. Both peptides were >95% pure as determined by HPLC and had the expected molecular weight as judged by mass spectrometry. Segmental labeling of the 95-residue fragment, in which the N-Cys portion was [15N] labeled, resulted in a peptide that gave an NMR spectrum which was comparable to that of the unligated 73-residue peptide alone.

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