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. 2018 Apr 16;19(8):799-804.
doi: 10.1002/cbic.201700611. Epub 2018 Mar 15.

Tuning a Protein-Labeling Reaction to Achieve Highly Site Selective Lysine Conjugation

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Tuning a Protein-Labeling Reaction to Achieve Highly Site Selective Lysine Conjugation

Grace H Pham et al. Chembiochem. .

Abstract

Activated esters are widely used to label proteins at lysine side chains and N termini. These reagents are useful for labeling virtually any protein, but robust reactivity toward primary amines generally precludes site-selective modification. In a unique case, fluorophenyl esters are shown to preferentially label human kappa antibodies at a single lysine (Lys188) within the light-chain constant domain. Neighboring residues His189 and Asp151 contribute to the accelerated rate of labeling at Lys188 relative to the ≈40 other lysine sites. Enriched Lys188 labeling can be enhanced from 50-70 % to >95 % by any of these approaches: lowering reaction temperature, applying flow chemistry, or mutagenesis of specific residues in the surrounding protein environment. Our results demonstrated that activated esters with fluoro-substituted aromatic leaving groups, including a fluoronaphthyl ester, can be generally useful reagents for site-selective lysine labeling of antibodies and other immunoglobulin-type proteins.

Keywords: antibodies; bioconjugation; chemical tools; flow chemistry; lysine.

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