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1.
The advent of bioorthogonal chemistry has led to the development of powerful chemical tools that enable increasingly ambitious applications. In particular, these tools have made it possible to achieve what is considered to be the holy grail of many researchers involved in chemical biology: to perform unnatural chemical reactions within living organisms. In this minireview, we present an update of bioorthogonal reactions that have been carried out in animals for various applications. We outline the advances made in the understanding of fundamental biological processes, and the development of innovative imaging and therapeutic strategies using bioorthogonal chemistry.  相似文献   

2.
Over the past decade, several different metal-free bioorthogonal reactions have been developed to enable simultaneous double-click labeling with minimal-to-no competing cross-reactivities; such transformations are termed ‘mutually orthogonal’. More recently, several examples of successful triple ligation strategies have also been described. In this minireview, we discuss selected aspects of the development of orthogonal bioorthogonal reactions over the past decade, including general strategies to drive future innovations to achieve simultaneous, mutually orthogonal click reactions in one pot.  相似文献   

3.
Trans-cyclooctenes (TCOs) represent interesting and highly reactive dipolarophiles for organic transformations including bioorthogonal chemistry. Herein we show that TCOs react rapidly with nitrones and that these reactions are bioorthogonal. Kinetic analysis of acyclic and cyclic nitrones with strained-trans-cyclooctene (s-TCO) shows fast reactivity and demonstrates the utility of this cycloaddition reaction for bioorthogonal labelling. Labelling of the bacterial peptidoglycan layer with unnatural d -amino acids tagged with nitrones and s-TCO-Alexa488 is demonstrated. These new findings expand the bioorthogonal toolbox, and allow TCO reagents to be used in bioorthogonal applications beyond tetrazine ligations for the first time and open up new avenues for bioorthogonal ligations with diverse nitrone reactants.  相似文献   

4.
Protein lipidation and lipid trafficking control many key biological functions in all kingdoms of life. The discovery of diverse lipid species and their covalent attachment to many proteins has revealed a complex and regulated network of membranes and lipidated proteins that are central to fundamental aspects of physiology and human disease. Given the complexity of lipid trafficking and the protein targeting mechanisms involved with membrane lipids, precise and sensitive methods are needed to monitor and identify these hydrophobic molecules in bacteria, yeast, and higher eukaryotes. Although many analytical methods have been developed for characterizing membrane lipids and covalently modified proteins, traditional reagents and approaches have limited sensitivity, do not faithfully report on the lipids of interest, or are not readily accessible. The invention of bioorthogonal ligation reactions, such as the Staudinger ligation and azide-alkyne cycloadditions, has provided new tools to address these limitations, and their use has begun to yield fresh insight into the biology of protein lipidation and lipid trafficking. In this Account, we discuss how these new bioorthogonal ligation reactions and lipid chemical reporters afford new opportunities for exploring the biology of lipid-modified proteins and lipid trafficking. Lipid chemical reporters from our laboratory and several other research groups have enabled improved detection and large-scale proteomic analysis of fatty-acylated and prenylated proteins. For example, fatty acid and isoprenoid chemical reporters in conjunction with bioorthogonal ligation methods have circumvented the limited sensitivity and hazards of radioactive analogues, allowing rapid and robust fluorescent detection of lipidated proteins in all organisms tested. These chemical tools have revealed alterations in protein lipidation in different cellular states and are beginning to provide unique insights in mechanisms of regulation. Notably, the purification of proteins labeled with lipid chemical reporters has allowed both the large-scale analysis of lipidated proteins as well as the discovery of new lipidated proteins involved in metabolism, gene expression, and innate immunity. Specific lipid reporters have also been developed to monitor the trafficking of soluble lipids; these species are enabling bioorthogonal imaging of membranes in cells and tissues. Future advances in bioorthogonal chemistry, specific lipid reporters, and spectroscopy should provide important new insight into the functional roles of lipidated proteins and membranes in biology.  相似文献   

5.
Lipids play critical roles in a litany of physiological and pathophysiological events, often through the regulation of protein function. These activities are generally difficult to characterize, however, because the membrane environment in which lipids operate is very complex. Moreover, lipids have a diverse range of biological functions, including the recruitment of proteins to membrane surfaces, actions as small-molecule ligands, and covalent protein modification through lipidation. Advancements in the development of bioorthogonal reactions have facilitated the study of lipid activities by providing the ability to selectively label probes bearing bioorthogonal tags within complex biological samples. In this Account, we discuss recent efforts to harness the beneficial properties of bioorthogonal labeling strategies in elucidating lipid function. Initially, we summarize strategies for the design and synthesis of lipid probes bearing bioorthogonal tags. This discussion includes issues to be considered when deciding where to incorporate the tag, particularly the presentation within a membrane environment. We then present examples of the application of these probes to the study of lipid activities, with a particular emphasis on the elucidation of protein-lipid binding interactions. One such application involves the development of lipid and membrane microarray analysis as a high-throughput platform for characterizing protein-binding interactions. Here we discuss separate strategies for binding analysis involving the immobilization of either whole liposomes or simplified isolated lipid structures. In addition, we present the different strategies that have been used to derivatize membrane surfaces via bioorthogonal reactions, either by using this chemistry to produce functionalized lipid scaffolds that can be incorporated into membranes or through direct modification of intact membrane surfaces. We then provide an overview of the development of lipid activity probes to label and identify proteins that bind to a particular lipid from complex biological samples. This process involves the strategy of activity-based proteomics, in which proteins are collectively labeled on the basis of function (in this case, ligand binding) rather than abundance. We summarize strategies for designing and applying lipid activity probes that allow for the selective labeling and characterization of protein targets. Additionally, we briefly comment on applications other than studying protein-lipid binding. These include the generation of new lipid structures with beneficial properties, labeling of tagged lipids in live cells for studies involving fluorescence imaging, elucidation of covalent protein lipidation, and identification of biosynthetic lipid intermediates. These applications illustrate the early phase of the promising field of applying bioorthogonal chemistry to the study of lipid function.  相似文献   

6.
The late-stage functionalization of peptides and proteins holds significant promise for drug discovery and facilitates bioorthogonal chemistry. This selective functionalization leads to innovative advances in in vitro and in vivo biological research. However, it is a challenging endeavor to selectively target a certain amino acid or position in the presence of other residues containing reactive groups. Biocatalysis has emerged as a powerful tool for selective, efficient, and economical modifications of molecules. Enzymes that have the ability to modify multiple complex substrates or selectively install nonnative handles have wide applications. Herein, we highlight enzymes with broad substrate tolerance that have been demonstrated to modify a specific amino acid residue in simple or complex peptides and/or proteins at late-stage. The different substrates accepted by these enzymes are mentioned together with the reported downstream bioorthogonal reactions that have benefited from the enzymatic selective modifications.  相似文献   

7.
Proteins are the workhorses of the cell, playing crucial roles in virtually every biological process. The revolutionary ability to visualize and monitor proteins in living systems, which is largely the result of the development of green fluorescence protein (GFP) and its derivatives, has dramatically expanded our understanding of protein dynamics and function. Still, GFPs are ill suited in many circumstances; one major drawback is their relatively large size, which can significantly perturb the functions of the native proteins to which they are fused. To bridge this gap, scientists working at the chemistry-biology interface have developed methods to install bioorthogonal functional groups into proteins in living cells. The bioorthogonal group is, by definition, a non-native and nonperturbing chemical group. But more importantly, the installed bioorthogonal handle is able to react with a probe bearing a complementary functionality in a highly selective fashion and with the cell operating in its physiological state. Although extensive efforts have been directed toward the development of bioorthogonal chemical reactions, introducing chemical functionalities into proteins in living systems remains an ongoing challenge. In this Account, we survey recent progress in this area, focusing on a genetic code expansion approach. In nature, a cell uses posttranslational modifications to append the necessary functional groups into proteins that are beyond those contained in the canonical 20 amino acids. Taking lessons from nature, scientists have chosen or engineered certain enzymes to modify target proteins with chemical handles. Alternatively, one can use the cell's translational machinery to genetically encode bioorthogonal functionalities, typically in the form of unnatural amino acids (UAAs), into proteins; this can be done in a residue-specific or a site-specific manner. For studying protein dynamics and function in living cells, site-specific modification by means of genetic code expansion is usually favored. A variety of UAAs bearing bioorthogonal groups as well as other functionalities have been genetically encoded into proteins of interest. Although this approach is well established in bacteria, tagging proteins in mammalian cells is challenging. A facile pyrrolysine-based system, which might potentially become the "one-stop shop" for protein modification in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells, has recently emerged. This technology can effectively introduce a series of bioorthogonal handles into proteins in mammalian cells for subsequent chemical conjugation with small-molecule probes. Moreover, the method may provide more precise protein labeling than GFP tagging. These advancements build the foundation for studying more complex cellular processes, such as the dynamics of important receptors on living mammalian cell surfaces.  相似文献   

8.
Targeting small molecules to diseased tissues as therapy or diagnosis is a significant challenge in drug delivery. Drug‐eluting devices implanted during invasive surgery allow the controlled presentation of drugs at the disease site, but cannot be modified once the surgery is complete. We demonstrate that bioorthogonal click chemistry can be used to target circulating small molecules to hydrogels resident intramuscularly in diseased tissues. We also demonstrate that small molecules can be repeatedly targeted to the diseased area over the course of at least one month. Finally, two bioorthogonal reactions were used to segregate two small molecules injected as a mixture to two separate locations in a mouse disease model. These results demonstrate that click chemistry can be used for pharmacological drug delivery, and this concept is expected to have applications in refilling drug depots in cancer therapy, wound healing, and drug‐eluting vascular grafts and stents.  相似文献   

9.
Bioorthogonal reactions are chemical reactions that neither interact with nor interfere with a biological system. The participating functional groups must be inert to biological moieties, must selectively reactive with each other under biocompatible conditions, and, for in vivo applications, must be nontoxic to cells and organisms. Additionally, it is helpful if one reactive group is small and therefore minimally perturbing of a biomolecule into which it has been introduced either chemically or biosynthetically. Examples from the past decade suggest that a promising strategy for bioorthogonal reaction development begins with an analysis of functional group and reactivity space outside those defined by Nature. Issues such as stability of reactants and products (particularly in water), kinetics, and unwanted side reactivity with biofunctionalities must be addressed, ideally guided by detailed mechanistic studies. Finally, the reaction must be tested in a variety of environments, escalating from aqueous media to biomolecule solutions to cultured cells and, for the most optimized transformations, to live organisms. Work in our laboratory led to the development of two bioorthogonal transformations that exploit the azide as a small, abiotic, and bioinert reaction partner: the Staudinger ligation and strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition. The Staudinger ligation is based on the classic Staudinger reduction of azides with triarylphosphines first reported in 1919. In the ligation reaction, the intermediate aza-ylide undergoes intramolecular reaction with an ester, forming an amide bond faster than aza-ylide hydrolysis would otherwise occur in water. The Staudinger ligation is highly selective and reliably forms its product in environs as demanding as live mice. However, the Staudinger ligation has some liabilities, such as the propensity of phosphine reagents to undergo air oxidation and the relatively slow kinetics of the reaction. The Staudinger ligation takes advantage of the electrophilicity of the azide; however, the azide can also participate in cycloaddition reactions. In 1961, Wittig and Krebs noted that the strained, cyclic alkyne cyclooctyne reacts violently when combined neat with phenyl azide, forming a triazole product by 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition. This observation stood in stark contrast to the slow kinetics associated with 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of azides with unstrained, linear alkynes, the conventional Huisgen process. Notably, the reaction of azides with terminal alkynes can be accelerated dramatically by copper catalysis (this highly popular Cu-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) is a quintessential "click" reaction). However, the copper catalysts are too cytotoxic for long-term exposure with live cells or organisms. Thus, for applications of bioorthogonal chemistry in living systems, we built upon Wittig and Krebs' observation with the design of cyclooctyne reagents that react rapidly and selectively with biomolecule-associated azides. This strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition is often referred to as "Cu-free click chemistry". Mechanistic and theoretical studies inspired the design of a series of cyclooctyne compounds bearing fluorine substituents, fused rings, and judiciously situated heteroatoms, with the goals of optimizing azide cycloaddition kinetics, stability, solubility, and pharmacokinetic properties. Cyclooctyne reagents have now been used for labeling azide-modified biomolecules on cultured cells and in live Caenorhabditis elegans, zebrafish, and mice. As this special issue testifies, the field of bioorthogonal chemistry is firmly established as a challenging frontier of reaction methodology and an important new instrument for biological discovery. The above reactions, as well as several newcomers with bioorthogonal attributes, have enabled the high-precision chemical modification of biomolecules in vitro, as well as real-time visualization of molecules and processes in cells and live organisms. The consequence is an impressive body of new knowledge and technology, amassed using a relatively small bioorthogonal reaction compendium. Expansion of this toolkit, an effort that is already well underway, is an important objective for chemists and biologists alike.  相似文献   

10.
Bioorthogonal chemistry can be used for the selective modification of biomolecules without interfering with any other functionality that might be present. Recent developments in the field include orthogonal bioorthogonal reactions to modify multiple biomolecules simultaneously. During our research, we observed that the reaction rates for the bioorthogonal inverse‐electron‐demand Diels–Alder (iEDDA) reactions between nonstrained vinylboronic acids (VBAs) and dipyridyl‐s‐tetrazines were exceptionally higher than those between VBAs and tetrazines bearing a methyl or phenyl substituent. As VBAs are mild Lewis acids, we hypothesised that coordination of the pyridyl nitrogen atom to the boronic acid promoted tetrazine ligation. Herein, we explore the molecular basis and scope of VBA–tetrazine ligation in more detail and benefit from its unique reactivity in the simultaneous orthogonal tetrazine labelling of two proteins modified with VBA and norbornene, a widely used strained alkene. We further show that the two orthogonal iEDDA reactions can be performed in living cells by labelling the proteasome by using a nonselective probe equipped with a VBA and a subunit‐selective VBA bearing a norbornene moiety.  相似文献   

11.
Bioorthogonal chemistry traces its roots to a seminal report by Saxon and Bertozzi, who described a modified Staudinger reaction between organic azides and triaryl phosphines. This finding not only inspired several biological pursuits, but also launched an entire field of reaction discovery. Over the years, much effort has been directed at identifying alternative bioorthogonal transformations with organic azides; less work has focused on leveraging triaryl phosphines for new reaction development. The landscape has changed in recent years, with the generation of faster-reacting Staudinger probes and novel classes of bioorthogonal reagents. This perspective covers newly developed phosphine-based chemistries and their application in biological settings. We focus, in particular, on reactions with cyclopropenones and related analogs. These transformations feature unique mechanisms that are broadening the scope of bioorthogonal reactivity.  相似文献   

12.
Disease mechanisms are increasingly being resolved at the molecular level. Biomedical success at this scale creates synthetic opportunities for combining specifically designed orthogonal reactions in applications such as imaging, diagnostics, and therapy. For practical reasons, it would be helpful if bioorthogonal coupling reactions proceeded with extremely rapid kinetics (k > 10(3) M(-1) s(-1)) and high specificity. Improving kinetics would minimize both the time and amount of labeling agent required to maintain high coupling yields. In this Account, we discuss our recent efforts to design extremely rapid bioorthogonal coupling reactions between tetrazines and strained alkenes. These selective reactions were first used to covalently couple conjugated tetrazine near-infrared-emitting fluorophores to dienophile-modifed extracellular proteins on living cancer cells. Confocal fluorescence microscopy demonstrated efficient and selective labeling, and control experiments showed minimal background fluorescence. Multistep techniques were optimized to work with nanomolar concentrations of labeling agent over a time scale of minutes: the result was successful real-time imaging of covalent modification. We subsequently discovered fluorogenic probes that increase in fluorescence intensity after the chemical reaction, leading to an improved signal-to-background ratio. Fluorogenic probes were used for intracellular imaging of dienophiles. We further developed strategies to react and image chemotherapeutics, such as trans-cyclooctene taxol analogues, inside living cells. Because the coupling partners are small molecules (<300 Da), they offer unique steric advantages in multistep amplification. We also describe recent success in using tetrazine reactions to label biomarkers on cells with magneto-fluorescent nanoparticles. Two-step protocols that use bioorthogonal chemistry can significantly amplify signals over both one-step labeling procedures as well as two-step procedures that use more sterically hindered biotin-avidin interactions. Nanoparticles can be detected with fluorescence or magnetic resonance techniques. These strategies are now being routinely used on clinical samples for biomarker profiling to predict malignancy and patient outcome. Finally, we discuss recent results with tetrazine reactions used for in vivo molecular imaging applications. Rapid tetrazine cycloadditions allow modular labeling of small molecules with the most commonly used positron emission tomography isotope, (18)F. Additionally, recent work has applied this reaction directly in vivo for the pretargeted imaging of solid tumors. Future work with tetrazine cycloadditions will undoubtedly lead to optimized protocols, improved probes, and additional biomedical applications.  相似文献   

13.
In addition to its use for the study of biomolecules in living systems, bioorthogonal chemistry has emerged as a promising strategy to enable protein or drug activation in a spatially and temporally controlled manner. This study demonstrates the application of a bioorthogonal inverse electron-demand Diels–Alder (iEDDA) reaction to cleave trans-cyclooctene (TCO) and vinyl protecting groups from carboxylic acid-containing molecules. The tetrazine-mediated decaging reaction proceeded under biocompatible conditions with fast reaction kinetics (<2 min). The anti-inflammatory activity of ketoprofen was successfully reinstated after decaging of the nontoxic TCOprodrug in live macrophages. Overall, this work expands the scope of functional groups and the application of decaging reactions to a new class of drugs.  相似文献   

14.
The advent of bioorthogonal chemistry, more importantly the strain-promoted 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of cyclooctynes with azides to give stable triazoles, has opened new avenues for the study of biomolecules in their native environment. While much effort has been focused on improving the kinetics of these reactions, very little attention has been given to their bioselectivity. In this review, we will take you on our journey that led us to develop new cyclooctyne probes with enhanced physical attributes, including water solubility, cell-surface labeling selectivity and fluorogenic capabilities. We then went on to expand the bioorthogonal chemistry toolbox by focusing on the development of new chemical reporters. Here you will read about our work investigating the use of other 1,3-dipoles, including nitrile oxides and diazo reagents, for the labeling of biomolecules, and more recently highly biostable sydnones that can be exploited to selectively influence glycan-processing enzymes.  相似文献   

15.
In this review, we highlight groundbreaking discoveries and applications of Staudinger reactions in the molecular life sciences, starting from the engineering of the Staudinger ligation as a bioorthogonal reaction until most recent applications in modern bioconjugation methods to generate next-generation biopharmaceuticals. Bioorthogonal reactions refer to a set of chemoselective transformations in biological environments able to take place in presence of naturally occurring functional groups. The Staudinger ligation set a new paradigm of such transformations, resulting in the development of various labeling and bioconjugation strategies for the modification of (bio-)molecules of interest.  相似文献   

16.
Bacteria constitute a major lifeform on this planet and play numerous roles in ecology, physiology, and human disease. However, conventional methods to probe their activities are limited in their ability to visualize and identify their functions in these diverse settings. In the last two decades, the application of click chemistry to label these microbes has deepened our understanding of bacterial physiology. With the development of a plethora of chemical tools that target many biological molecules, it is possible to track these microorganisms in real-time and at unprecedented resolution. Here, we review click chemistry, including bioorthogonal reactions, and their applications in imaging bacterial glycans, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids using chemical reporters. We also highlight significant advances that have enabled biological discoveries that have heretofore remained elusive.  相似文献   

17.
Genetically encoded p‐azido‐phenylalanine (azF) residues in G protein‐coupled receptors (GPCRs) can be targeted with dibenzocyclooctyne‐modified (DIBO‐modified) fluorescent probes by means of strain‐promoted [3+2] azide–alkyne cycloaddition (SpAAC). Here we show that azF residues situated on the transmembrane surfaces of detergent‐solubilized receptors exhibit up to 1000‐fold rate enhancement relative to azF residues on water‐exposed surfaces. We show that the amphipathic moment of the labeling reagent, consisting of hydrophobic DIBO coupled to hydrophilic Alexa dye, results in strong partitioning of the DIBO group into the hydrocarbon core of the detergent micelle and consequently high local reactant concentrations. The observed rate constant for the micelleenhanced SpAAC is comparable with those of the fastest bioorthogonal labeling reactions known. Targeting hydrophobic regions of membrane proteins by use of micelle‐enhanced SpAAC should expand the utility of bioorthogonal labeling strategies.  相似文献   

18.
Penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) are a family of bacterial enzymes that are key components of cell-wall biosynthesis and the target of β-lactam antibiotics. Most microbial pathogens contain multiple structurally homologous PBP isoforms, making it difficult to target individual PBPs. To study the roles and regulation of specific PBP isoforms, a panel of bioorthogonal β-lactone probes was synthesized and compared. Fluorescent labeling confirmed selectivity, and PBPs were selectively enriched from Streptococcus pneumoniae lysates. Comparisons between fluorescent labeling of probes revealed that the accessibility of bioorthogonal reporter molecules to the bound probe in the native protein environment exerts a more significant effect on labeling intensity than the bioorthogonal reaction used, observations that are likely applicable beyond this class of probes or proteins. Selective, bioorthogonal activity-based probes for PBPs will facilitate the activity-based determination of the roles and regulation of specific PBP isoforms, a key gap in knowledge that has yet to be filled.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Nanomaterials with enzyme-mimicking behavior (nanozymes) have attracted a lot of research interest recently. In comparison to natural enzymes, nanozymes hold many advantages, such as good stability, ease of production and surface functionalization. As the catalytic mechanism of nanozymes is gradually revealed, the application fields of nanozymes are also broadly explored. Beyond traditional colorimetric detection assays, nanozymes have been found to hold great potential in a variety of biomedical fields, such as tumor theranostics, antibacterial, antioxidation and bioorthogonal reactions. In this review, we summarize nanozymes consisting of different nanomaterials. In addition, we focus on the catalytic performance of nanozymes in biomedical applications. The prospects and challenges in the practical use of nanozymes are discussed at the end of this Minireview.  相似文献   

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