4.4 Article

Phosphoramidate End Labeling of Inorganic Polyphosphates: Facile Manipulation of Polyphosphate for Investigating and Modulating Its Biological Activities

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 49, Issue 45, Pages 9935-9941

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi1014437

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Heart, Lung, and Blood institute [R01 HL47014]
  2. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [R01 GM 75937]
  3. American Heart Association [0920045G]

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Polyphosphates, linear polymers of inorganic phosphates linked by phosphoanhydride bonds, are widely present among organisms and play diverse roles in biology, including functioning as potent natural modulators of the human blood clotting system. However, studies of protein polyphosphate interactions are hampered by a dearth of methods for derivatizing polyphosphate or immobilizing it onto solid supports. We now report that EDAC (1-ethyl-3[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide) efficiently promotes the covalent attachment of a variety of primary amine-containing labels and probes to the terminal phosphates of polyphosphates via stable phosphoramidate linkages. Using P-31 NMR, we confirmed that EDAC-mediated reactions between primary amines and polyphosphate result in phosphoramidate linkages with the terminal phosphate groups. We show that polyphosphate can be biotinylated, labeled with fluorophores, and immobilized onto solid supports, that immobilized polyphosphate can be readily used to quantify protein binding affinities, that covalently derivatized or immobilized polyphosphate retains its ability to trigger blood clotting, and that derivatizing the ends of polyphosphate with spermidine protects it from exopolyphosphatase degradation. Our findings open up essentially the entire armamentarium of protein chemistry to modifying polyphosphate, which should greatly facilitate studies of its biological roles.

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