ABSTRACT
A chemoselective method is described for coupling chlorophyll derivatives with an aldehyde group to synthetic peptides or proteins modified with an aminoxyacetyl group at the epsilon-amino group of a lysine residue. Three template-assembled antiparallel four-helix bundles were synthesized for the ligation of one or two chlorophylls. This was achieved by coupling unprotected peptides to cysteine residues of a cyclic decapeptide by thioether formation. The amphiphilic helices were designed to form a hydrophobic pocket for the chlorophyll derivatives. Chlorophyll derivatives Zn-methyl-pheophorbide b and Zn-methyl-pyropheophorbide d were used. The aldehyde group of these chlorophyll derivatives was ligated to the modified lysine group to form an oxime bond. The peptide-chlorophyll conjugates were characterized by electrospray mass spectrometry, analytical HPLC, and UV/visible spectroscopy. Two four-helix bundle chlorophyll conjugates were further characterized by size-exclusion chromatography, circular dichroism, and resonance Raman spectroscopy.
Subject(s)
Chlorophyll/analogs & derivatives , Plant Proteins/chemical synthesis , Amino Acid Sequence , Chromatography, Gel , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Circular Dichroism , Drug Design , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Peptides/chemical synthesis , Plant Proteins/chemistry , Spectrophotometry , Spectrum Analysis, RamanABSTRACT
Integrated bioelectrocatalytically active electrodes are assembled by the deposition of enzymes onto respective electrically contacted affinity matrices and further cross-linking of the enzyme monolayers. A catalyst-NAD(+)-dyad for the binding of the NAD(+)-dependent enzymes and cytochrome-like molecules for the binding of the heme-protein-dependent enzymes are used to construct integrated electrically contacted biocatalytic systems. NAD(+)-dependent lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) is assembled onto a pyrroloquinoline quinone-NAD+ monolayer. The redox-active monolayer is organized via covalent attachment of pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) to a cystamine monolayer associated with a Au-electrode, followed by covalent linkage of N6-(2-aminoethyl)-NAD+ to the monolayer. The interface modified with the PQQ-NAD(+)-dyad provides temporary affinity binding for LDH and allows cross-linking of the enzyme monolayer. The cross-linked LDH is bioelectrocatalytically active towards oxidation of lactate. The bioelectrocatalyzed process involves the PQQ-mediated oxidation of the immobilized NADH. Integrated, electrically contacted bioelectrodes are produced by the affinity binding and further cross-linking of nitrate reductase (NR) (cytochrome-dependent, E.C. 1.9.6.1 from E. coli) or CoII-protoporphyrin IX reconstituted myoglobin (CoII-Mb) atop the microperoxidase-11 (MP-11) monolayer associated with a Au-electrode. The MP-11 monolayer provides an affinity interface for the temporary binding of the enzymes, that allows the cross-linkage of the enzyme molecules. The MP-11 assembly acts as electron transfer mediator for the reduction of the secondary enzyme layer. The integrated bioelectrodes consisting of NR and CoII-Mb show catalytic activities for NO3- reduction and acetylene-dicarboxylic acid hydrogenation, respectively. Two FeIII-protoporphyrin IX units are reconstituted into a four alpha-helix bundle de novo protein assembled as a monolayer on a Au-electrode. Vectorial electron transfer proceeds in the synthetic heme-protein monolayer. Cross-linking of an affinity complex generated between the FeIII-protoporphyrin IX reconstituted de novo protein monolayer and NR yields an integrated, electrically contacted enzyme electrode that stimulates the bioelectrocatalyzed reduction of nitrate.
Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques , Enzymes/analysis , Animals , Catalysis , Enzymes/chemistry , Humans , Oxidation-Reduction , Static ElectricityABSTRACT
The design and chemical synthesis of two de novo four-helix bundle proteins is described; each protein has two bound cofactors. Their construction from purified peptides is based on the modular assembly of different amphiphilic helices by chemoselective coupling to a cyclic peptide template. In the hydrophobic interior of the antiparallel four-helix bundle these proteins contain a heme in a binding pocket with two ligating histidine residues. A ruthenium-tris(bipyridine) complex is covalently bound to different positions at the hydrophilic side of one of the heme-binding helices. Laser-induced electron transfer across the varied distance through this helix has been studied and compared with a pathway analysis. The UV-visible, CD, and mass spectra are consistent with the structure and orientation predetermined by the template.