Description
Proteins are among the important macromolecules in living systems, with diverse biological functions and properties that make them greatly interesting to study in both structure and function. The chemical synthesis of proteins allows researchers to incorporate a wide variety of post-translation modifications that can diversify protein functions. It also allows the incorporation of many noncanonical amino acids that enable the study of protein structure and function, as well as the control of their activity in living cells. The work presented in this dissertation focuses on two DNA-templated chemical synthesis approaches for the synthesis of proteins: i) DNA-templated native chemical ligation (NCL), and ii) DNA-templated click chemistry. NCL and its extended version has been used as a powerful tool to obtain proteins; however, it still struggles to make longer proteins due to aggregation and poor yield. To address these issues, a DNA-templated approach is being developed where two peptide fragments are brought into proximity by an oligonucleotide to facilitate the NCL reaction. The sequential ligation of the peptide fragments will result in full-length proteins with increased yield and improved solubility. This research involves synthesis of small molecule auxiliaries, thioester peptides, DNA-peptide conjugates, and ligation of peptides through NCL. This method has the potential to be applied to synthesize large hydrophobic proteins.
A DNA-templated click chemistry method was also reported where duplex DNA was utilized as a template for enhancing the copper click reaction between peptide fragments into functional mini-proteins. As a proof of principle, peptide fragments were synthesized with click functional groups and conjugated with distinct DNA handles through a disulfide exchange bioconjugation reaction. The DNA-peptide conjugates were assembled with the template to bring the two peptides into proximity and enhance the effective molarities of the functional groups. The peptides were coupled efficiently using a copper click reaction. The designed DNA-templated method is being implemented to synthesize a designed mini-protein (called LCB1), which can bind tightly to the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2 and inhibit its interaction with the human angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) receptor. This method allows researchers to introduce multiple non-natural amino acids in the protein and has the potential to extend to larger proteins, synthetic polymers, and DNA-peptide biomaterials.
Details
Title
- DNA-templated Chemical Synthesis of Proteins and Polypeptides
Contributors
- Al-Amin, Md (Author)
- Stephanopoulos, Nicholas (Thesis advisor)
- Gould, Ian (Committee member)
- Ghirlanda, Giovanna (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2024
Subjects
Resource Type
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Note
- Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2024
- Field of study: Chemistry