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Reactivity of N-acyl hydrazone probes with the mammalian proteome†
Tyler A. Shaw,Megan H. Powdrill,Allison R. Sherratt,Keira Garland,Bin-Jie Li,André M. Beauchemin,John Paul Pezacki
RSC Medicinal Chemistry Pub Date : 04/28/2021 00:00:00 , DOI:10.1039/D1MD00027F
Abstract

Small molecule probes with distinct reactivities are useful tools for the identification and characterization of protein modifications and function. Herein, we show that hydrazone probes with an N-carbamate structural motif react differently from N-carbamates within the human proteome. Mass spectrometry analysis of probe-treated mammalian cell lysates identified several proteins that were covalently modified by the hydrazone probes, including the cytidine deaminase APOBEC3A. We used this enzyme as a model to explore the reactivity of the probes with amino acid residues using LC–MS/MS. Both reactive serine and cysteine residues outside of the enzyme active site were covalently modified. A 1-napthol leaving group provided the most extensive reactivity. These results confirm a unique chemotype for hydrazone probes which can be further optimized to target distinct targets of the human proteome.

Graphical abstract: Reactivity of N-acyl hydrazone probes with the mammalian proteome
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