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Dive into the research topics where Bradley L. Pentelute is active.

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Featured researches published by Bradley L. Pentelute.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

A Perfluoroaryl-Cysteine SNAr Chemistry Approach to Unprotected Peptide Stapling

Alexander M. Spokoyny; Yekui Zou; Jingjing J. Ling; Hongtao Yu; Yu-Shan Lin; Bradley L. Pentelute

We report the discovery of a facile transformation between perfluoroaromatic molecules and a cysteine thiolate, which is arylated at room temperature. This new approach enabled us to selectively modify cysteine residues in unprotected peptides, providing access to variants containing rigid perfluoroaromatic staples. This stapling modification performed on a peptide sequence designed to bind the C-terminal domain of an HIV-1 capsid assembly polyprotein (C-CA) showed enhancement in binding, cell permeability, and proteolytic stability properties, as compared to the unstapled analog. Importantly, chemical stability of the formed staples allowed us to use this motif in the native chemical ligation-mediated synthesis of a small protein affibody that is capable of binding the human epidermal growth factor 2 receptor.


Nature | 2015

Atomic structure of anthrax protective antigen pore elucidates toxin translocation.

Jiansen Jiang; Bradley L. Pentelute; R. John Collier; Z. Hong Zhou

Anthrax toxin, comprising protective antigen, lethal factor, and oedema factor, is the major virulence factor of Bacillus anthracis, an agent that causes high mortality in humans and animals. Protective antigen forms oligomeric prepores that undergo conversion to membrane-spanning pores by endosomal acidification, and these pores translocate the enzymes lethal factor and oedema factor into the cytosol of target cells. Protective antigen is not only a vaccine component and therapeutic target for anthrax infections but also an excellent model system for understanding the mechanism of protein translocation. On the basis of biochemical and electrophysiological results, researchers have proposed that a phi (Φ)-clamp composed of phenylalanine (Phe)427 residues of protective antigen catalyses protein translocation via a charge-state-dependent Brownian ratchet. Although atomic structures of protective antigen prepores are available, how protective antigen senses low pH, converts to active pore, and translocates lethal factor and oedema factor are not well defined without an atomic model of its pore. Here, by cryo-electron microscopy with direct electron counting, we determine the protective antigen pore structure at 2.9-Å resolution. The structure reveals the long-sought-after catalytic Φ-clamp and the membrane-spanning translocation channel, and supports the Brownian ratchet model for protein translocation. Comparisons of four structures reveal conformational changes in prepore to pore conversion that support a multi-step mechanism by which low pH is sensed and the membrane-spanning channel is formed.


Nature Chemistry | 2016

π-Clamp-mediated cysteine conjugation

Chi Zhang; Matthew Welborn; Tianyu Zhu; Nicole J. Yang; Michael S. Santos; Troy Van Voorhis; Bradley L. Pentelute

Site-selective functionalization of complex molecules is one of the most significant challenges in chemistry. Typically, protecting groups or catalysts must be used to enable the selective modification of one site among many that are similarly reactive, and general strategies that selectively tune the local chemical environment around a target site are rare. Here, we show a four-amino-acid sequence (Phe-Cys-Pro-Phe), which we call the ‘π-clamp’, that tunes the reactivity of its cysteine thiol for site-selective conjugation with perfluoroaromatic reagents. We use the π-clamp to selectively modify one cysteine site in proteins containing multiple endogenous cysteine residues. These examples include antibodies and cysteine-based enzymes that would be difficult to modify selectively using standard cysteine-based methods. Antibodies modified using the π-clamp retained binding affinity to their targets, enabling the synthesis of site-specific antibody–drug conjugates for selective killing of HER2-positive breast cancer cells. The π-clamp is an unexpected approach to mediate site-selective chemistry and provides new avenues to modify biomolecules for research and therapeutics. Incorporation of a π-clamp—a four-residue sequence (Phe-Cys-Pro-Phe)—into a protein enables the site-specific modification of the π-clamp cysteine side-chain. The π-clamp can be genetically encoded and does not require protecting-groups or catalysts to provide selective conjugation.


ChemBioChem | 2014

Rapid Flow‐Based Peptide Synthesis

Mark D. Simon; Patrick L. Heider; Andrea Adamo; Alexander A. Vinogradov; Surin K. Mong; Xiyuan Li; Tatiana Berger; Rocco L. Policarpo; Chi Zhang; Yekui Zou; Xiaoli Liao; Alexander M. Spokoyny; Klavs F. Jensen; Bradley L. Pentelute

A flow‐based solid‐phase peptide synthesis methodology that enables the incorporation of an amino acid residue every 1.8 min under automatic control or every 3 min under manual control is described. This is accomplished by passing a stream of reagent through a heat exchanger into a low volume, low backpressure reaction vessel, and through a UV detector. These features enable continuous delivery of heated solvents and reagents to the solid support at high flow rate, thereby maintaining maximal concentration of reagents in the reaction vessel, quickly exchanging reagents, and eliminating the need to rapidly heat reagents after they have been added to the vessel. The UV detector enables continuous monitoring of the process. To demonstrate the broad applicability and reliability of this method, it was employed in the total synthesis of a small protein, as well as dozens of peptides. The quality of the material obtained with this method is comparable to that for traditional batch methods, and, in all cases, the desired material was readily purifiable by RP‐HPLC. The application of this method to the synthesis of the 113‐residue Bacillus amyloliquefaciens RNase and the 130‐residue DARPin pE59 is described in the accompanying manuscript.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Nitrogen Arylation for Macrocyclization of Unprotected Peptides

Guillaume Lautrette; Fayçal Touti; Hong Geun Lee; Peng Dai; Bradley L. Pentelute

We describe an efficient and mild method for the synthesis of macrocyclic peptides via nitrogen arylation from unprotected precursors. Various electrophiles and lysine-based nucleophiles were investigated and showed high-yielding product formation, even for a macrocyclization scan with 14 variants. We found that nitrogen-linked aryl products were more stable to base and oxidation when compared to thiol arylated species, thereby highlighting the utility of this methodology. Finally, N-aryl macrocyclization was performed on a p53 peptide inhibitor of MDM2 and resulted in identification of a nanomolar binder with improved proteolytic stability and cell permeability.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2017

A fully automated flow-based approach for accelerated peptide synthesis

Alexander James Mijalis; Dale Arlington Thomas Iii; Mark D. Simon; Andrea Adamo; Ryan Beaumont; Klavs F. Jensen; Bradley L. Pentelute

Here we report a fully automated, flow-based approach to solid-phase polypeptide synthesis, with amide bond formation in 7 seconds and total synthesis times of 40 seconds per amino acid residue. Crude peptide purities and isolated yields were comparable to those for standard-batch solid-phase peptide synthesis. At full capacity, this approach can yield tens of thousands of individual 30-mer peptides per year.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Flow‐Based Enzymatic Ligation by Sortase A

Rocco L. Policarpo; Hansol Kang; Xiaoli Liao; Amy E. Rabideau; Mark D. Simon; Bradley L. Pentelute

Sortase-mediated ligation (sortagging) is a versatile, powerful strategy for protein modification. Because the sortase reaction reaches equilibrium, a large excess of polyglycine nucleophile is often employed to drive the reaction forward and suppress sortase-mediated side reactions. A flow-based sortagging platform employing immobilized sortase A within a microreactor was developed that permits efficient sortagging at low nucleophile concentrations. The platform was tested with several reaction partners and used to generate a protein bioconjugate inaccessible by solution-phase batch sortagging.


ChemBioChem | 2014

Rapid total synthesis of DARPin pE59 and barnase.

Surin K. Mong; Alexander A. Vinogradov; Mark D. Simon; Bradley L. Pentelute

We report the convergent total synthesis of two proteins: DARPin pE59 and Bacillus amyloliquefaciens RNase (Barnase). Leveraging our recently developed fast‐flow peptide‐synthesis platform, we rapidly explored numerous conditions for the assembly of long polypeptides, and were able to mitigate common side reactions, including deletion and aspartimide products. We report general strategies for improving the synthetic quality of difficult peptide sequences with our system. High‐quality protein fragments produced under optimal synthetic conditions were subjected to convergent native chemical ligation, which afforded native full‐length proteins after a final desulfurization step. Both DARPin and Barnase were folded and found to be as active as their recombinant analogues.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

An Umpolung Approach for the Chemoselective Arylation of Selenocysteine in Unprotected Peptides.

Daniel T. Cohen; Chi Zhang; Bradley L. Pentelute; Stephen L. Buchwald

Herein we report an umpolung strategy for the bioconjugation of selenocysteine in unprotected peptides. This mild and operationally simple approach takes advantage of the electrophilic character of an oxidized selenocysteine (Se–S bond) to react with a nucleophilic arylboronic acid to provide the arylated selenocysteine within hours. This reaction is amenable to a wide range of boronic acids with different biorelevant functional groups and is unique to selenocysteine. Experimental evidence indicates that under oxidative conditions the arylated derivatives are more stable than the corresponding alkylated selenocysteine.


Organic Letters | 2014

Enzyme-Catalyzed Macrocyclization of Long Unprotected Peptides

Chi Zhang; Peng Dai; Alexander M. Spokoyny; Bradley L. Pentelute

A glutathione S-transferase (GST) catalyzed macrocyclization reaction for peptides up to 40 amino acids in length is reported. GST catalyzes the selective SNAr reaction between an N-terminal glutathione (GSH, γ-Glu-Cys-Gly) tag and a C-terminal perfluoroaryl-modified cysteine on the same polypeptide chain. Cyclic peptides ranging from 9 to 24 residues were quantitatively produced within 2 h in aqueous pH = 8 buffer at room temperature. The reaction was highly selective for cyclization at the GSH tag, enabling the combination of GST-catalyzed ligation with native chemical ligation to generate a large 40-residue peptide macrocycle.

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Chi Zhang

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Mark D. Simon

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Alexander A. Vinogradov

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Amy E. Rabideau

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Surin K. Mong

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Xiaoli Liao

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Justin Wolfe

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Peng Dai

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Yekui Zou

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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