Photoswitchable
Isoprenoid Lipids Enable Optical Control
of Peptide Lipidation
Posted on 2022-10-04 - 18:21
Photoswitchable
lipids have emerged as attractive tools for the
optical control of lipid bioactivity, metabolism, and biophysical
properties. Their design is typically based on the incorporation of
an azobenzene photoswitch into the hydrophobic lipid tail, which can
be switched between its trans- and cis-form using two different wavelengths of light. While glycero- and
sphingolipids have been successfully designed to be photoswitchable,
isoprenoid lipids have not yet been investigated. Herein, we describe
the development of photoswitchable analogs of an isoprenoid lipid
and systematically assess their potential for the optical control
of various steps in the isoprenylation processing pathway of CaaX
proteins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. One photoswitchable
analog of farnesyl diphosphate (AzoFPP-1) allowed effective
optical control of substrate prenylation by farnesyltransferase. The
subsequent steps of isoprenylation processing (proteolysis by either
Ste24 or Rce1 and carboxyl methylation by Ste14) were less affected
by photoisomerization of the group introduced into the lipid moiety
of the substrate a-factor, a mating pheromone from yeast. We assessed
both proteolysis and methylation of the a-factor analogs in
vitro and the bioactivity of a fully processed a-factor analog
containing the photoswitch, exogenously added to cognate yeast cells.
Combined, these data describe the first successful conversion of an
isoprenoid lipid into a photolipid and suggest the utility of this
approach for the optical control of protein prenylation.
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Morstein, Johannes; Bader, Taysir; Cardillo, Ariana L.; Schackmann, Julian; Ashok, Sudhat; Hougland, James L.; et al. (1753). Photoswitchable
Isoprenoid Lipids Enable Optical Control
of Peptide Lipidation. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acschembio.2c00645Â