The bacterial cell wall peptidoglycan contains unusual l- and d-amino acids assembled as branched peptides. Insight into the biosynthesis of the polymer has been hampered by limited access to substrates and to suitable polymerization assays. Here we report the full synthesis of the peptide stem of peptidoglycan precursors from two pathogenic bacteria, Enterococcus faecium and Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and the development of a sensitive post-derivatization assay for their cross-linking by l,d-transpeptidases. Access to series of stem peptides showed that amidation of free carboxyl groups is essential for optimal enzyme activity, in particular the amidation of diaminopimelate (DAP) residues for the cross-linking activity of the l,d-transpeptidase Ldt from M. tuberculosis. Accordingly, construction of a conditional mutant established the essential role of AsnB indicating that this DAP amidotransferase is an attractive target for the development of anti-mycobacterial drugs.
Integrins are cell surface proteins responsible for cell motility. Inspired by the rich disulfide exchange chemistry of integrins, we show here the inhibition of cell migration by cascade exchangers (CAXs), which also enable and inhibit cell penetration by thiol-mediated uptake. Fast-moving CAXs such as reversible Michael acceptor dimers, dithiabismepanes, and bioinspired epidithiodiketopiperazines are best, much better than Ellman's reagent. The implication that integrins participate in thiol-mediated uptake is confirmed by reduced uptake in integrin-knockdown cells. Although thiol-mediated uptake is increasingly emerging as a unifying pathway to bring matter into cells, its molecular basis is essentially unknown. These results identify the integrin superfamily as experimentally validated general cellular partners in the dynamic covalent exchange cascades that are likely to account for thiolmediated uptake. The patterns identified testify to the complexity of the dynamic covalent networks involved. This work also provides chemistry tools to explore cell motility and expands the drug discovery potential of CAXs from antiviral toward antithrombotic and antitumor perspectives.
Chalcogen-centered cascade exchange chemistry is increasingly understood to account for thiol-mediated uptake, that is, the ability of reversibly thiol-reactive agents to penetrate cells. Here, reversible Michael acceptors are shown to enable and inhibit thiolmediated uptake, including the cytosolic delivery of proteins. Dynamic cyano-cinnamate dimers rival the best chalcogen-centered inhibitors. Patterns generated in inhibition heatmaps reveal contributions from halogen-bonding switches that occur independent from the thyroid transporter MCT8. The uniqueness of these patterns supports that the entry of tetrel-centered exchangers into cells differs from chalcogen-centered systems. These results expand the chemical space of thiol-mediated uptake and support the existence of a universal exchange network to bring matter into cells, abiding to be decoded for drug delivery and drug discovery in the broadest sense.
Chalcogen‐centered cascade exchange chemistry is increasingly understood to account for thiol‐mediated uptake, that is, the ability of reversibly thiol‐reactive agents to penetrate cells. Here, reversible Michael acceptors are shown to enable and inhibit thiol‐mediated uptake, including the cytosolic delivery of proteins. Dynamic cyano‐cinnamate dimers rival the best chalcogen‐centered inhibitors. Patterns generated in inhibition heatmaps reveal contributions from halogen‐bonding switches that occur independent from the thyroid transporter MCT8. The uniqueness of these patterns supports that the entry of tetrel‐centered exchangers into cells differs from chalcogen‐centered systems. These results expand the chemical space of thiol‐mediated uptake and support the existence of a universal exchange network to bring matter into cells, abiding to be decoded for drug delivery and drug discovery in the broadest sense.
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