Azido-Desferrioxamine Siderophores as Functional Click-Chemistry Probes Generated in Culture upon Adding a Diazo-Transfer Reagent
Access status:
Open Access
Type
Pre-printAbstract
This work aimed to undertake the in situ conversion of the terminal amine groups of bacterial desferrioxamine (DFO) siderophores, including desferrioxamine B (DFOB), to azide groups to enable downstream click chemistry. Initial studies trialed a precursor-directed biosynthesis (PDB) ...
See moreThis work aimed to undertake the in situ conversion of the terminal amine groups of bacterial desferrioxamine (DFO) siderophores, including desferrioxamine B (DFOB), to azide groups to enable downstream click chemistry. Initial studies trialed a precursor-directed biosynthesis (PDB) approach. Supplementing Streptomyces pilosus culture with blunt-end azido/amine non-native substrates designed to replace 1,5-diaminopentane as the native diamine substrate in the terminal amine position of DFOB did not produce azido-DFOB. Addition of the diazo-transfer reagent imidazole-1-sulfonyl azide hydrogen sulfate to spent S. pilosus medium that had been cultured in the presence of 1,4-diaminobutane, as a viable native substrate to expand the suite of native DFO-type siderophores, successfully generated the cognate suite of azido-DFO analogues. CuI-mediated or strain-promoted CuI-free click chemistry reactions between this minimally processed mixture and the appropriate alkyne-bearing biotin reagents produced the cognate suite of 1,4-disubstituted triazole-linked DFO-biotin compounds as potential molecular probes, detected as FeIII-loaded species. The amine-to-azide transformation of amine-bearing natural products in complex mixtures by the direct addition of a diazo-transfer reagent to deliver functional click chemistry reagents adds to the toolbox for chemical proteomics, chemical biology, and drug discovery.
See less
See moreThis work aimed to undertake the in situ conversion of the terminal amine groups of bacterial desferrioxamine (DFO) siderophores, including desferrioxamine B (DFOB), to azide groups to enable downstream click chemistry. Initial studies trialed a precursor-directed biosynthesis (PDB) approach. Supplementing Streptomyces pilosus culture with blunt-end azido/amine non-native substrates designed to replace 1,5-diaminopentane as the native diamine substrate in the terminal amine position of DFOB did not produce azido-DFOB. Addition of the diazo-transfer reagent imidazole-1-sulfonyl azide hydrogen sulfate to spent S. pilosus medium that had been cultured in the presence of 1,4-diaminobutane, as a viable native substrate to expand the suite of native DFO-type siderophores, successfully generated the cognate suite of azido-DFO analogues. CuI-mediated or strain-promoted CuI-free click chemistry reactions between this minimally processed mixture and the appropriate alkyne-bearing biotin reagents produced the cognate suite of 1,4-disubstituted triazole-linked DFO-biotin compounds as potential molecular probes, detected as FeIII-loaded species. The amine-to-azide transformation of amine-bearing natural products in complex mixtures by the direct addition of a diazo-transfer reagent to deliver functional click chemistry reagents adds to the toolbox for chemical proteomics, chemical biology, and drug discovery.
See less
Date
2020Source title
ChemBioChemVolume
21Issue
10Publisher
WileyFunding information
ARC DP180100785Rights statement
This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: M. P. Gotsbacher, R. Codd, ChemBioChem 2020, 21, 1433., which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1002/cbic.201900661. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Use of Self-Archived Versions."Faculty/School
Faculty of Medicine and Health, School of Medical SciencesShare