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Electrochemistry-enabled residue-specific modification of peptides and proteins.

Authors
  • Bandyopadhyay, Ayan1
  • Biswas, Pranay2
  • Kundu, Sudipta K3
  • Sarkar, Rajib3
  • 1 Department of Chemistry, Chapra Government College, Nadia-741123, West Bengal, India. , (India)
  • 2 Department of Physics, Dinabandhu Mahavidyalaya, 24 Parganas (N), 743235, West Bengal, India. , (India)
  • 3 Department of Chemistry, Muragachha Government College, Nadia-741154, West Bengal, India. [email protected]. , (India)
Type
Published Article
Journal
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry
Publisher
The Royal Society of Chemistry
Publication Date
Feb 07, 2024
Volume
22
Issue
6
Pages
1085–1101
Identifiers
DOI: 10.1039/d3ob01857a
PMID: 38231504
Source
Medline
Language
English
License
Unknown

Abstract

Selective chemical reactions at precise amino acid residues of peptides and proteins have become an exploding field of research in the last few decades. With the emerging utility of bioconjugated peptides and proteins as drug leads and therapeutic agents, the design of smart protocols to modulate and conjugate biomolecules has become necessary. During this modification, the most important concern of biochemists is to keep intact the structural integrity of the biomolecules. Hence, a soft and selective biocompatible reaction environment is necessary. Electrochemistry, a mild and elegant tunable reaction platform to synthesize complex molecules while avoiding harsh and toxic chemicals, can provide such a reaction condition. However, this strategy is yet to be fully exploited in the field of selective modification of polypeptides. With this possibility, the use of electrochemistry as a reaction toolbox in peptide and protein chemistry is flourishing day by day. Unfortunately, there is no suitable review article summarizing the residue-specific modification of biomolecules. The present review provides a comprehensive summary of the latest manifested electrochemical approaches for the modulation of five redox-active amino acid residues, namely cysteine, tyrosine, tryptophan, histidine and methionine, found in peptides and proteins. The article also highlights the incredible potential of electrochemistry for the regio- as well as chemoselective bioconjugation strategy of biomolecules.

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