Pan B, Shimogawa M, Zhao J, Rhoades E, Kashina A, Petersson EJ. Cysteine-Based Mimic of Arginylation Reproduces Neuroprotective Effects of the Authentic Post-Translational Modification on α-Synuclein. J Am Chem Soc. 2022 May 4;144(17):7911-7918. doi: 10.1021/jacs.2c02499. Epub 2022 Apr 22. PMID: 35451816; PMCID: PMC9922158.

Abstract

Arginylation is an understudied post-translational modification (PTM) involving the transfer of arginine to aspartate or glutamate sidechains in a protein. Among the targets of this PTM is α-synuclein (αS), a neuronal protein involved in regulating synaptic vesicles. The aggregation of αS is implicated in neurodegenerative diseases, particularly in Parkinson’s disease, and arginylation has been found to protect against this pathological process. Arginylated αS has been studied through semisynthesis involving multipart native chemical ligation (NCL), but this can be very labor-intensive with low yields. Here, we present a facile way to introduce a mimic of the arginylation modification into a protein of interest, compatible with orthogonal installation of labels such as fluorophores. We synthesize bromoacetyl arginine and react it with recombinant, site-specific cysteine mutants of αS. We validate the mimic by testing the vesicle binding affinity of mimic-arginylated αS, as well as its aggregation kinetics and monomer incorporation into fibrils, and comparing these results to those of authentically arginylated αS produced through NCL. In cultured neurons, we compare the fibril seeding capabilities of preformed fibrils carrying a small percentage of arginylated αS. We find that, consistent with authentically arginylated αS, mimic-arginylated αS does not perturb the protein’s native function but alters aggregation kinetics and monomer incorporation. Both mimic and authentically modified αS suppress aggregation in neuronal cells. Our results provide further insight into the neuroprotective effects of αS arginylation, and our alternative strategy to generate arginylated αS enables the study of this PTM in proteins not accessible through NCL.