Ubiquitination is one of the most ubiquitous posttranslational modifications in eukaryotes and is involved in various cellular events such as proteasomal degradation and DNA repair. The overwhelming majority of studies aiming to understand ubiquitination and deubiquitination have employed unanchored ubiquitin chains and mono-ubiquitinated proteins. To shed light on these processes at the molecular level, it is crucial to have facile access to ubiquitin chains linked to protein substrates. Such conjugates are highly difficult to prepare homogenously and in workable quantities using the enzymatic machinery. To address this formidable challenge we developed new chemical approaches to covalently attach ubiquitin chains to a protein substrate through its Cys residue. A key aspect of this approach is the installation of acyl hydrazide functionality at the C-terminus of the proximal Ub, which allows, after ubiquitin chain assembly, the introduction of various reactive electrophiles for protein conjugation. Employing α-globin as a model substrate, we demonstrate the facile conjugation to K48-linked ubiquitin chains, bearing up to four ubiquitins, through disulfide and thioether linkages. These bioconjugates were examined for their behavior with the USP2 enzyme, which was found to cleave the ubiquitin chain in a similar manner to unanchored ones. Furthermore, proteasomal degradation study showed that di-ubiquitinated α-globin is rapidly degraded in contrast to the mono-ubiquitinated counterpart, highlighting the importance of the chain lengths on proteasomal degradation. The present work opens unprecedented opportunities in studying the ubiquitin signal by enabling access to site-specifically polyubiquitinated proteins with an increased size and complexity.
The combination of native chemical ligation and desulfurization is considered a powerful strategy in protein synthesis. Homogeneous desulfurization conditions based on a radical induced reaction have been widely used in the syntheses of various challenging proteins and their analogues. However, the presence of aryl thiols in the reaction mixture as a ligation catalyst hampers one-pot ligation/ desulfurization, hence mandating additional purification/lyophilization steps prior to desulfurization. This significantly reduces the yield and prolongs the ligation process. Here we report that the use of preformed peptide-aryl thioester allows for efficient one-pot ligation and desulfurization. This approach was tested successfully for various model peptides including the synthesis of ubiquitin from two fragments. However, in the case of the synthesis of di-ubiquitin chains, where the ligation is mediated by d-mercaptolysine to form an isopeptide bond, excess aryl thiol was required for efficient ligation, necessitating purification prior to desulfurization. To overcome these obstacles, we found that functionalization of the aryl thiol with a hydrazide moiety enabled, after the ligation step, its capture by resin-aldehyde to permit direct desulfurization. Altogether, these approaches should facilitate protein synthesis with improved efficiency in yields and time.
A strategy for the synthesis of dehydroalanine based diubiquitin activity probes is described. The site-specific introduction of dehydroalanine was achieved from diubiquitin bearing Cys residue near the scissile bond between two ubiquitins linked through Lys48, Lys63 or in a head to tail fashion. The probes were characterized for their activities with various deubiquitinases, which open new opportunities in studying deubiquitinases in various settings.
Various hypotheses have been proposed regarding how chain length, linkage type, position on substrate, and susceptibility to deubiquitinases (DUBs) affect processing of different substrates by proteasome. Here we report a new strategy for the chemical synthesis of ubiquitinated proteins to generate a set of well-defined conjugates bearing an oxime bond between the chain and the substrate. We confirmed that this isopeptide replacement is resistant to DUBs and to shaving by proteasome. Analyzing products generated by proteasomes ranked how chain length governed degradation outcome. Our results support that (1) the cleavage of the proximal isopeptide bond is not a prerequisite for proteasomal degradation, (2) by overcoming trimming at the proteasome, tetraUb is a fundamentally different signal than shorter chains, and (3) the tetra-ubiquitin chain can be degraded with the substrate. Together these results highlight the usefulness of chemistry to dissect the contribution of proteasome-associated DUBs and the complexity of the degradation process.
Synthetically useful N-Fmoc amino-alkyl isothiocyanates have been described, starting from protected amino acids. These compounds have been synthesized in excellent yields by thiocarbonylation of the monoprotected 1,2-diamines with CS2/TEA/p-TsCl, isolated as stable solids, and completely characterized. The procedure has been extended to the synthesis of amino alkyl isothiocyanates from Boc- and Z-protected amino acids as well. The utility of these isothiocyanates for peptidomimetics synthesis has been demonstrated by employing them in the preparation of a series of dithioureidopeptide esters. Boc-Gly-OH and Boc-Phe-OH derived isothiocyanates 9a and 9c have been obtained as single crystals and their structures solved through X-ray diffraction. They belong to the orthorhombic crystal system, and have a single molecule in the asymmetric unit (Z' = 1). 9a crystallizes in the centrosymmetric space group Pbca, while 9c crystallizes in the noncentrosymmetric space group P2(1)2(1)2(1).
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