Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 287, Issue 32, 3 August 2012, Pages 27020-27025
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Minireviews
Chemical Synthesis of Circular Proteins*

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Circular proteins, once thought to be rare, are now commonly found in plants. Their chemical synthesis, once thought to be difficult, is now readily achievable. The enabling methodology is largely due to the advances in entropic chemical ligation to overcome the entropy barrier in coupling the N- and C-terminal ends of large peptide segments for either intermolecular ligation or intramolecular ligation in end-to-end cyclization. Key elements of an entropic chemical ligation consist of a chemoselective capture step merging the N and C termini as a covalently linked O/S-ester intermediate to permit the subsequent step of an intramolecular O/S-N acyl shift to form an amide. Many ligation methods exploit the supernucleophilicity of a thiol side chain at the N terminus for the capture reaction, which makes cysteine-rich peptides ideal candidates for the entropy-driven macrocyclization. Advances in desulfurization and modification of the thiol-containing amino acids at the ligation sites to other amino acids add extra dimensions to the entropy-driven ligation methods. This minireview describes recent advances of entropy-driven ligation to prepare circular proteins with or without a cysteinyl side chain.

Chemical Modification
Peptide Chemical Synthesis
Protein Chemical Modification
Protein Chemistry
Protein Synthesis
Cyclic Peptide
Cysteine-rich Peptides
Ligation
Oxidative Folding
Thioester

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*

This work was supported in part by Biomedical Research Council Grant 09/1/22/19/612 from A*STAR and Academic Research Fund Grant ARC21/08 from the Ministry of Education, Singapore. This is the fourth article in the Thematic Minireview Series on Circular Proteins.