Chemical synthesis of phosphorylated peptides of the carboxy‐terminal domain of human p53 by a segment condensation method
- 1 November 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in International Journal of Peptide and Protein Research
- Vol. 48 (5) , 429-442
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1399-3011.1996.tb00861.x
Abstract
A segment condensation method was developed for the chemical synthesis of large (>90 amino acid) phosphopeptides and was used to produce phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated derivatives of the C-terminal tetramerization and regulatory domains of human p53 (residues 303-393). Efficient condensation synthesis of the 91 residue p53 domain was achieved in two steps. The non-phosphorylated N-terminal segment p53(303-334) (1) and its derivative phosphorylated at serine 315 (1P315), and the non-phosphorylated middle segment p53(335-360) (2), were synthesized as partially protected peptide thioesters in the solid phase using Boc chemistry. The C-terminal segment p53(361-393) (3) and its derivative phosphorylated at serine 392 (3P392) were synthesized as partially protected peptides in the solid phase using Fmoc chemistry. Phosphoamino acid was incorporated into the N-terminal segment (1P315) at the residue corresponding to p53 serine 315 as Boc-Ser(PO3(Bzl)2)-OH during synthesis. Serine 392 in the C-terminal segment was selectively phosphorylated after synthesis by phosphitylation followed by oxidation. A derivative phosphorylated at serine 378 was synthesized in a one-step condensation of the unphosphorylated N-terminal segment (1) and the phosphorylated long C-terminal segment p53(335-393) (2-3P378). Yields of the ligated peptides after removal of the protecting groups and HPLC purification averaged 60% for the first condensation and 35% for the second condensation. All five p53 peptides exhibited monomer-tetramer association as determined by analytical ultracentrifu-gation. Circular dichroism spectroscopy revealed that phosphorylation at Ser315 increased the α-helical content, which was abolished when Ser392 also was phosphorylated, suggesting an interaction between N-terminal and C-terminal residues of the C-terminal domain of p53. © Munksgaard 1996.Keywords
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