Although electrochemical strategies
for small-molecule synthesis
are flourishing, this technology has yet to be fully exploited for
the mild and chemoselective modification of peptides and proteins.
With the growing number of diverse peptide natural products being
identified and the emergence of modified proteins as therapeutic and
diagnostic agents, methods for electrochemical modification stand
as alluring prospects for harnessing the reactivity of polypeptides
to build molecular complexity. As a mild and inherently tunable reaction
platform, electrochemistry is arguably well-suited to overcome the
chemo- and regioselectivity issues which limit existing bioconjugation
strategies. This Perspective will showcase recently developed electrochemical
approaches to peptide and protein modification. The article also highlights
the wealth of untapped opportunities for the production of homogeneously
modified biomolecules, with an eye toward realizing the enormous potential
of electrochemistry for chemoselective bioconjugation chemistry.
The importance of modified peptides and proteins for applications in drug discovery, and for illuminating biological processes at the molecular level, is fueling a demand for efficient methods that facilitate the precise modification of these biomolecules. Herein, we describe the development of a photocatalytic method for the rapid and efficient dimerization and site-specific functionalization of peptide and protein diselenides. This methodology, dubbed the photocatalytic diselenide contraction, involves irradiation at 450 nm in the presence of an iridium photocatalyst and a phosphine and results in rapid and clean conversion of diselenides to reductively stable selenoethers. A mechanism for this photocatalytic transformation is proposed, which is supported by photoluminescence spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations. The utility of the photocatalytic diselenide contraction transformation is highlighted through the dimerization of selenopeptides, and by the generation of two families of protein conjugates via the site-selective modification of calmodulin containing the 21st amino acid selenocysteine, and the C-terminal modification of a ubiquitin diselenide.
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