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Abiotic peptides as carriers of information for the encoding of small-molecule library synthesis

Author(s)
Rössler, Simon L; Grob, Nathalie M; Buchwald, Stephen L; Pentelute, Bradley L
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Abstract
Encoding small-molecule information in DNA has been leveraged to accelerate the discovery of ligands for therapeutic targets such as proteins. However, oligonucleotide-based encoding is hampered by inherent limitations of information stability and density. In this study, we establish abiotic peptides for next-generation information storage and apply them for the encoding of diverse small-molecule synthesis. The chemical stability of the peptide-based tag allows the use of palladium-mediated reactions to efficiently synthesize peptide-encoded libraries (PELs) with broad chemical diversity and high purity. We demonstrate the successful de novo discovery of small-molecule protein ligands from PELs by affinity selection against carbonic anhydrase IX and the oncogenic protein targets BRD4(1) and MDM2. Collectively, this work establishes abiotic peptides as carriers of information for the encoding of small-molecule synthesis, leveraged herein for the discovery of protein ligands.
Date issued
2023-03-02
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/165109
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemistry; Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Center for Environmental Health Sciences; Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
Journal
Science
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Citation
Simon L. Rössler et al. ,Abiotic peptides as carriers of information for the encoding of small-molecule library synthesis. Science 379, 939-945( 2023).
Version: Author's final manuscript

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