Tyrosinase-Mediated Bioconjugation. A Versatile Approach
to Chimeric Macromolecules
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Abstract
We
present a method for tyrosine-selective and reversible bioconjugation;
tyrosines are enzymatically converted into catechols and in situ “clicked”
onto boronic acids. Importantly, our process selectively produces
catechols and avoids quinones, thereby improving the control over
the chemical identity of the products. We have conjugated boronic
acid-containing hyaluronic acid (HyA) to peptides bearing tyrosines
in variable number and position; the use of tagging peptides for the
provision of well exposed tyrosine residuesin our case the
hemagglutinin-derived HA-tagmakes our approach applicable
to virtually any protein; we have demonstrated this concept by conjugating
HA-tagged ovalbumin to HyA, thereby also showing the feasibility of
producing chimeric proteoglycans. A caveat of this appproach is that,
although the formation of boronic esters does not affect the biological
recognition of substrates (ovalbumin and HyA), the introduction of
catechols may alter some of their biological properties: for example,
only after tyrosinase treatment ovalbumin directly induced dendritic
cell maturation, either alone or as a HyA conjugate