4.8 Article

Wavelength-Selective Uncaging of Two Different Photoresponsive Groups on One Effector Molecule for Light-Controlled Activation and Deactivation

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 143, Issue 28, Pages 10596-10603

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c02817

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DFG [280251937]
  2. state of Hesse
  3. [GRK 1986]

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PPGs are essential in biochemical studies for controlled release of effector molecules. The new TPOM method allows for both release and suppression of effector molecules through orthogonal photolysis of two PPGs. This strategy provides a precise and valuable tool for regulating biological processes with light.
Photocleavable protecting groups (PPGs) play a pivotal role in numerous studies. They enable controlled release of small effector molecules to induce biochemical function. The number of PPGs attached to a variety of effector molecules has grown rapidly in recent years satisfying the high demand for new applications. However, until now molecules carrying PPGs have been designed to activate function only in a single direction, namely the release of the effector molecule. Herein, we present the new approach Two-PPGs-One-Molecule (TPOM) that exploits the orthogonal photolysis of two photoprotecting groups to first release the effector molecule and then to modify it to suppress its induced effect. The moiety resembling the tyrosyl side chain of the translation inhibitor puromycin was synthetically modified to the photosensitive ortho-nitrophenylalanine that cyclizes upon near UV-irradiation to an inactive puromycin cinnoline derivative. Additionally, the modified puromycin analog was protected by the thiocoumarylmethyl group as the second PPG. This TPOM strategy allows an initial wavelength-selective activation followed by a second light-induced deactivation. Both photolysis processes were spectroscopically studied in the UV/vis- and IR-region. In combination with quantum-chemical calculations and time-resolved NMR spectroscopy, the photoproducts of both activation and deactivation steps upon illumination were characterized. We further probed the translation inhibition effect of the new synthesized puromycin analog upon light activation/deactivation in a cell-free GFP translation assay. TPOM as a new method for precise triggering activation/deactivation of effector molecules represents a valuable addition for the control of biological processes with light.

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