Strategies to Stabilise Peptide Secondary Structure Using Unnatural Amino Acid Crosslinking
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2024Author:
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2026-08-28Citation:
Calvert, Susannah Honor, Strategies to Stabilise Peptide Secondary Structure Using Unnatural Amino Acid Crosslinking, Trinity College Dublin, School of Chemistry, Chemistry, 2024Download Item:
Abstract:
The communication between proteins plays a pivotal role in both biological and
pathological processes. Protein-protein interactions (PPIs) play crucial roles in
transcription, signal transduction and apoptosis; as such, exploring modulators of PPIs is
a promising strategy for the development of novel therapeutics. Due to the large,
relatively featureless nature of PPIs developing small molecule inhibitors is highly
challenging. However, peptides provide an alternative to small molecules, exhibiting
remarkable capability in binding to these protein surfaces commonly involved in PPIs.
PPIs are mediated by the cumulative binding energy of many amino acid residues, over
an extended surface. Through analysis of PPIs, it has been determined that many of the
residues involved adopt secondary structure elements such as a-helices and b-sheets
which are crucial for effective binding. However, linear peptides possess great
conformational flexibility in solution and as such modifications such a cyclisation are
required to restrain these secondary structure elements.
Within this work, peptides were conformationally restrained in order to stabilise their
secondary structure. Particular focus was on the stabilisation of a b-hairpin that is
involved in the PPI existing between the 5’ endonuclease XPF-ERCC1 and the XPA
protein in the nuclear excision repair pathway. This pathway is one of the most versatile
DNA repair pathways and upregulation of both the pathway and ERCC1 have been
implicated in chemotherapy resistance. As such efforts toward the synthesis of a b-
hairpin peptide to inhibit this interaction were investigated through cyclisation of the
minimal binding motif using unnatural amino acids.
In addition, methodology to develop a peptide staple to induce a-helicity is developed.
This is shown through restraining a model pentapeptide incorporating an unnatural
alkyne containing amino acid and a cysteine thiol using the thiol-yne coupling reaction.
The methodology developed is shown to have promising results in its ability to nucleate
an a-helix.
Finally, the selective modification of lysine residues through functional group
interconversion from a side chain amine to an azide is described on an amino acid and
peptide system. This was later demonstrated on a model protein system. This provided a
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handle to undertake a copper(I)-catalysed alkyne-azide cycloaddition click reaction with
an alkyne. Utilisation of an alkyne fluorophore could allow for this methodology to be
used for imaging of proteins.
Overall, the work presented in this thesis provide insights into methods to
conformationally restrained peptides using a range of unnatural amino acids. In
particular, significant progress in the development of a thiol-yne click methodology for
stabilising a-helices which may, in the future, enable for the stabilisation of a-helices
involved in PPIs.
Sponsor
Grant Number
Irish Research Council (IRC)
Author's Homepage:
https://tcdlocalportal.tcd.ie/pls/EnterApex/f?p=800:71:0::::P71_USERNAME:CALVERTSDescription:
APPROVED
Author: Calvert, Susannah Honor
Sponsor:
Irish Research Council (IRC)Advisor:
McGouran, JoannaPublisher:
Trinity College Dublin. School of Chemistry. Discipline of ChemistryType of material:
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Full text availableSubject:
cyclic peptide, peptide, peptide therapeutics, chemical biologyMetadata
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