Design of a substrate-tailored peptiligase variant for the efficient synthesis of thymosin-α<sub>1</sub>.
Schmidt. Marcel M; Toplak. Ana A; Rozeboom. Henriëtte J HJ; Wijma. Hein J HJ; Quaedflieg. Peter J L M PJLM; van Maarseveen. Jan H JH; Janssen. Dick B DB; Nuijens. Timo T
Key Findings
- Thymoligase, an engineered peptiligase, catalyzes the ligation of two 14‑mer thymosin‑α1 segments with >94% yield.
- The chemo‑enzymatic process yields an overall 55% of thymosin‑α1, about twice the yield of conventional industrial synthesis.
- Crystal structure of thymoligase matches the design, indicating the enzyme can be adapted for other peptides with similar residue patterns.
Practical Outcomes
- This new synthesis route could make thymosin‑α1 cheaper and more accessible for biohackers, but it doesn’t provide new dosing or health guidance. The protocol offers a practical, water‑based method that enthusiasts with peptide synthesis capability could try to adopt, though it still requires specialized enzyme production and purification steps.
Summary
Scientists created a new enzyme called thymoligase that can stitch together two 14‑amino‑acid pieces to make the 28‑amino‑acid peptide thymosin‑α1 in water, achieving very high reaction efficiency and roughly doubling the overall production yield compared to older methods.
Abstract
The synthesis of thymosin-α<sub>1</sub>, an acetylated 28 amino acid long therapeutic peptide, via conventional chemical methods is exceptionally challenging. The enzymatic coupling of unprotected peptide segments in water offers great potential for a more efficient synthesis of peptides that are difficult to synthesize. Based on the design of a highly engineered peptide ligase, we developed a fully convergent chemo-enzymatic peptide synthesis (CEPS) process for the production of thymosin-α<sub>1</sub>via a 14-mer + 14-mer segment condensation strategy. Using structure-inspired enzyme engineering, the thiol-subtilisin variant peptiligase was tailored to recognize the respective 14-mer thymosin-α<sub>1</sub> segments in order to create a clearly improved biocatalyst, termed thymoligase. Thymoligase catalyzes peptide bond formation between both segments with a very high efficiency (>94% yield) and is expected to be well applicable to many other ligations in which residues with similar characteristics (e.g. Arg and Glu) are present in the respective positions P1 and P1'. The crystal structure of thymoligase was determined and shown to be in good agreement with the model used for the engineering studies. The combination of the solid phase peptide synthesis (SPPS) of the 14-mer segments and their thymoligase-catalyzed ligation on a gram scale resulted in a significantly increased, two-fold higher overall yield (55%) of thymosin-α<sub>1</sub> compared to those typical of existing industrial processes.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
2018-01-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.1039/c7ob02812a
24
42