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Selective Synthesis of Lysine Peptides and the Prebiotically Plausible Synthesis of Catalytically Active Diaminopropionic Acid Peptide Nitriles in Water

Thoma, Benjamin; Powner, Matthew W; (2023) Selective Synthesis of Lysine Peptides and the Prebiotically Plausible Synthesis of Catalytically Active Diaminopropionic Acid Peptide Nitriles in Water. Journal of the American Chemical Society , 145 (5) pp. 3121-3130. 10.1021/jacs.2c12497. Green open access

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Abstract

Why life encodes specific proteinogenic amino acids remains an unsolved problem, but a non-enzymatic synthesis that recapitulates biology's universal strategy of stepwise N-to-C terminal peptide growth may hold the key to this selection. Lysine is an important proteinogenic amino acid that, despite its essential structural, catalytic, and functional roles in biochemistry, has widely been assumed to be a late addition to the genetic code. Here, we demonstrate that lysine thioacids undergo coupling with aminonitriles in neutral water to afford peptides in near-quantitative yield, whereas non-proteinogenic lysine homologues, ornithine, and diaminobutyric acid cannot form peptides due to rapid and quantitative cyclization that irreversibly blocks peptide synthesis. We demonstrate for the first time that ornithine lactamization provides an absolute differentiation of lysine and ornithine during (non-enzymatic) N-to-C-terminal peptide ligation. We additionally demonstrate that the shortest lysine homologue, diaminopropionic acid, undergoes effective peptide ligation. This prompted us to discover a high-yielding prebiotically plausible synthesis of the diaminopropionic acid residue, by peptide nitrile modification, through the addition of ammonia to a dehydroalanine nitrile. With this synthesis in hand, we then discovered that the low basicity of diaminopropionyl residues promotes effective, biomimetic, imine catalysis in neutral water. Our results suggest diaminopropionic acid, synthesized by peptide nitrile modification, can replace or augment lysine residues during early evolution but that lysine's electronically isolated sidechain amine likely provides an evolutionary advantage for coupling and coding as a preformed monomer in monomer-by-monomer peptide translation.

Type: Article
Title: Selective Synthesis of Lysine Peptides and the Prebiotically Plausible Synthesis of Catalytically Active Diaminopropionic Acid Peptide Nitriles in Water
Location: United States
Open access status: An open access version is available from UCL Discovery
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c12497
Publisher version: https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c12497
Language: English
Additional information: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0).
UCL classification: UCL
UCL > Provost and Vice Provost Offices > UCL BEAMS
UCL > Provost and Vice Provost Offices > UCL BEAMS > Faculty of Maths and Physical Sciences
UCL > Provost and Vice Provost Offices > UCL BEAMS > Faculty of Maths and Physical Sciences > Dept of Chemistry
URI: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10164584
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