Abstract
Phytosulfokine (PSK) is a highly conserved plant peptide hormone (PPH) containing two sulfated tyrosine residues. PSK acts as a growth factor in Arabidopsis thaliana plant species and significantly improves the efficiency of cellular proliferation in plant cell culture, a process known as regenaration. However, many important plant species are recalcitrant under exposure to PSK and require e.g., artificially generated PPHs to boost regeneration. Here, we report the design, chemical synthesis, and biological evaluation of the regeneration capacity of a PSK-like peptide library. Our set of thirteen PSK analogues included N-terminal modifications, amino acid substitutions, incorporation of diastereomers, and backbone N-methylation. Insertion of the latter required solution-phase synthesis of the proper building block prior to solid-phase peptide synthesis. The biological activity of the PSK analogues was assessed in the regeneration capacity of
Brassica oleracea cells (protoplasts). Most PSK analogues did not affect the regeneration capacity as compared to PSK. For example, when an alanine substitution was introduced and replaced either 2-Ile or 4-Thr, the bio-activity was fully abolished. However, 2-allo-Ile PSK and 4-Nme-Thr PSK showed increased activity in protoplast regeneration when compared with that of the native peptide. These findings indicated that introducing small chemical
modifications in the PPH PSK provides opportunities for inducing protoplast regeneration in recalcitrant species.
Supplementary materials
Title
supplementary material for Phytosulfokine Peptide Library: Chemical Synthesis and Biological Evaluation on Protoplast Regeneration
Description
Used reagents, general procedures, molecular docking simulations, synthetic procedures, Fmoc-Tyr(SO2ONp)-Nme-AA-OH building block synthesis (AA = Ile or The(tBu)), LC and HRMS analytical data of all peptides, plant proliferation assay, 1H adn 13C NMR spectra of all synthesized building blocks, references specific to the supplementary material.
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