New protein scissors turned on by light - C&EN Global Enterprise

Nov 16, 2010 - New protein scissors turned on by light. MAUREEN ROUHI. Chem. Eng. News , 1998, 76 (36), p 12. DOI: 10.1021/cen-v076n036.p012...
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nizes," says Kumar. Because the phenyl­ alanine carboxyl part of the molecule is hydrophilic and the pyrene part is hy­ drophobic, Py-Phe will lodge only in A small-molecule-based reagent designed those parts of the protein where a hy­ to recognize and bind to specific sites in drophilic pocket is very close to a hy­ proteins can cut the protein backbone drophobic pocket, he explains. "There after irradiation with light. Such reagents aren't many such twin binding sites in a could be very useful for sequencing and given protein." precisely manipulating proteins. Laser flash photolysis studies indicate The photoactive compound is ^ p h e ­ that a Py-Phe cation radical initiates pro­ nylalanine)-^ 1 -pyrene)butyramide (Py- tein cleavage. This species is formed af­ Phe). It was designed and investigated by ter excitation from the reaction between Challa V. Kumar, an associate professor of singlet excited-state Py-Phe and an elec­ chemistry at the University of Connecti­ tron acceptor, cobalt(III) hexammine. cut, Storrs, and graduate student Apinya The researchers suggest that hydrogen Buranaprapuk, and researchers at Glaxo atom abstraction from the protein back­ Wellcome, Research Triangle Park, N.C., bone and reaction with oxygen yields a and Columbia University [Proc. Natl. hydroperoxyl radical. Subsequent reac­ tions involving hydrolysis split the pep­ Acad. Sci, 95, 10361 (1998)]. "It would be great if there were pho- tide bond. The ability to cleave protein backtocleavage probes for proteins just as there have been for DNA," says Jacque­ line K. Barton, a chemistry professor at California Institute of Technology. "If C0 2 H [Py-Phe] can be a general reagent for cutting proteins—and that's an impor­ tant thing that needs to be estab­ lished—it could very useful for looking at protein and peptide structures and the binding of molecules to proteins and peptides." Ν~(Λ -Phenylalanine)Using two test proteins, a lysozyme 4-(1 -pyrene)butyramide and an albumin, the researchers have es­ tablished that photocleavage by Py-Phe is highly specific. Py-Phe binds to the ly­ bones with the use of light has many ad­ sozyme only at one site, and after irradia­ vantages. "One can imagine trying to do tion at 344 nm, it efficiently splits the things at a single-molecule level," ex­ protein into only two pieces. With the plains coauthor and Columbia University albumin, Py-Phe binds to two sites, but chemistry professor Nicholas J. Turro. again the protein is split into only two "With a laser, you can focus precisely so pieces. In one of the albumin binding that you can literally be dealing with one sites, says Kumar, the reagent is not well protein molecule at a time and sequenc­ oriented for the cleavage reaction. ing it and doing things with it. That kind "We designed the molecule to be very of information and the ability to obtain it discriminating about the sites it recog­ that precisely are impossible with ther­ mal means." β With light, there's also a CQ timing feature that can be | exploited to extract a host % of information about how | reactions between proteins °- and things that bind to them occur. "You can pulse a laser so itfiresat femtosec­ ond or picosecond pulse widths," says Turro. "You can have one photon pro­ duce something and a sec­ ond photon acting on that product before it disap­ pears. All kinds of manipula­ Buranaprapuk (left) and Kumar designed new tions are possible that are protein snipper.

New protein scissors turned on by light

12 SEPTEMBER 7, 1998 C&EN

completely out of the question by conven­ tional means." Down the road, Kumar sees potential therapeutic applications. "We could de­ sign small photoactive molecules that recognize specific proteins related to dis­ eases," he says. "By shining light on the patient, the bad proteins would break and be deactivated." Maureen Rouhi

Amoco sued over brain cancers Seven former Amoco employees and their families are suing the company, charging that their workplace exposure to toxic chemicals led to cancer. Between 1989 and 1997, six of the plaintiffs were diag­ nosed with intercranial tumors and one with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma; three plaintiffs have since died. All conducted research in one wing of the Amoco Re­ search Center in Naperville, HI. The plaintiffs seek compensatory dam­ ages for medical and legal expenses and punitive damages. The lawsuit wasfiledas a class action, allowing any of the nearly 8,000 employees who have worked at the site to participate. The company, which formed a task force to investigate the illnesses soon after the brain cancers were first diagnosed in 1989 (C&EN, April 27, page 12), was sur­ prised by the legal action, according to Amoco spokesman Scott Dean. "Our primary concern remains the health and well-being of our current and former colleagues," says Dean. "We intend to continue our investigation into this mys­ tery and openly communicate what we learn." To date, 12 benign and seven ma­ lignant intercranial tumors have been diag­ nosed in current and former employees. According to company accounting rec­ ords, all of the affected employees worked with catalysts and solvents and had in common 34 chemical R&D projects. The lawsuit, filed in Cook County, 111., circuit court on Aug. 25, claims that Amoco was negligent for not testing all of the research materials used in its facil­ ity and failing to advise its employees about any potential risk. It also charges that Amoco failed to maintain a safe work environment. Several other companies are named as potential defendants, pending discovery efforts by the plaintiffs' lawyers. Three are chemical companies—BASF, SigmaAldrich, and Henkel—that may have sup-