Rapid, site-specific labeling of proteins with diverse
probes remains
an outstanding challenge for chemical biologists. Enzyme-mediated
labeling approaches may be rapid but use protein or peptide fusions
that introduce perturbations into the protein under study and may
limit the sites that can be labeled, while many “bioorthogonal”
reactions for which a component can be genetically encoded are too
slow to effect quantitative site-specific labeling of proteins on
a time scale that is useful for studying many biological processes.
We report a fluorogenic reaction between bicyclo[6.1.0]non-4-yn-9-ylmethanol
(BCN) and tetrazines that is 3–7 orders of magnitude faster
than many bioorthogonal reactions. Unlike the reactions of strained
alkenes, including trans-cyclooctenes and norbornenes,
with tetrazines, the BCN–tetrazine reaction gives a
single product of defined stereochemistry. We have discovered aminoacyl-tRNA
synthetase/tRNA pairs for the efficient site-specific incorporation
of a BCN-containing amino acid, 1, and a trans-cyclooctene-containing amino acid 2 (which also reacts
extremely rapidly with tetrazines) into proteins expressed in Escherichia coli and mammalian cells. We demonstrate
the rapid fluorogenic labeling of proteins containing 1 and 2 in vitro, in E. coli, and in live mammalian cells. These approaches may be extended to
site-specific protein labeling in animals, and we anticipate that
they will have a broad impact on labeling and imaging studies.
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