4.8 Article

Semisynthesis and folding of the potassium channel KcsA

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 124, Issue 31, Pages 9113-9120

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja0266722

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Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM43949] Funding Source: Medline

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In this contribution we describe the semisynthesis of the potassium channel, KcsA. A truncated form of KcsA, comprising the first 125 amino acids of the 160-amino acid protein, was synthesized using expressed protein ligation. This truncated form corresponds to the entire membrane-spanning region of the protein and is similar to the construct previously used in crystallographic studies on the KcsA protein. The ligation reaction was carried out using an N-terminal recombinant pepticle alpha-thioester, corresponding to residues 1-73 of KcsA, and a synthetic C-terminal pepticle corresponding to residues 74-125. Chemical synthesis of the C-peptide was accomplished by optimized Boc-SPPS techniques. A dual fusion strategy, involving glutathione-S-transferase (GST) and the GyrA intein, was developed for recombinant expression of the N-peptide alpha-thioester. The fusion protein, expressed in the insoluble form as inclusion bodies, was refolded and then cleaved successively to remove the GST tag and the intein, thereby releasing the N-peptide alpha-thioester. Following chemical ligation, the KcsA polypeptide was folded into the tetrameric state by incorporation into lipid vesicles. The correctness of the folded state was verified by the ability of the KcsA tetramer to bind to agitoxin-2. To our knowledge, this work represents the first reported semisynthesis of a polytopic membrane protein and highlights the potential application of native chemical ligation and expressed protein ligation for the (semi)synthesis of integral membrane proteins.

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