This Article describes the molecular recognition of peptides containing an N-terminal methionine (Met) by the synthetic receptor cucurbit[8]uril (Q8) in aqueous solution and with submicromolar affinity. Prior work established that Q8 binds with high affinity to peptides containing aromatic amino acids, either by simultaneous binding of two aromatic residues, one from each of two different peptides, or by simultaneous binding of an aromatic residue and its immediate neighbor on the same peptide. The additional binding interface of two neighboring residues suggested the possibility of targeting nonaromatic peptides, which have thus far bound only weakly to synthetic receptors. A peptide library designed to test this hypothesis was synthesize...
Biochemical studies have revealed the propensity of aromatic amino acid residues to mediate importan...
Mass spectrometry (MS)-based analysis using enzymatic digestion is widely used for protein sequencin...
The discovery of molecules that bind tightly and selectively to desired proteins continues to drive ...
This Article describes the molecular recognition of peptides containing an N-terminal methionine (Me...
Chemists have long attempted to prepare synthetic receptors (SRs) that can bind natural targets with...
Sequence-selective recognition is an important goal for synthetic receptors binding to proteins with...
This paper describes the molecular recognition of phenylalanine derivatives and their peptides by th...
This paper describes the molecular recognition of the tripeptide Tyr-Leu-Ala by the synthetic recept...
This paper describes the molecular recognition of amino acids by cucurbit[8]uril (Q8) and by the 1:1...
The highly sequence-selective molecular recognition of proteins and peptides in Nature inspires and ...
This article describes the selective recognition and noncovalent dimerization of N-terminal aromatic...
At the forefront of the endeavor to understand and manipulate living systems is the design and study...
This paper describes a novel assay for measuring the relative extent of peptide binding in a large p...
The binding interactions of cucurbit[8]uril (Q[8]) with L-valine, D-leucine, and D-methionine, both ...
The molecular recognition of peptides and proteins in aqueous solution by designed molecules remains...
Biochemical studies have revealed the propensity of aromatic amino acid residues to mediate importan...
Mass spectrometry (MS)-based analysis using enzymatic digestion is widely used for protein sequencin...
The discovery of molecules that bind tightly and selectively to desired proteins continues to drive ...
This Article describes the molecular recognition of peptides containing an N-terminal methionine (Me...
Chemists have long attempted to prepare synthetic receptors (SRs) that can bind natural targets with...
Sequence-selective recognition is an important goal for synthetic receptors binding to proteins with...
This paper describes the molecular recognition of phenylalanine derivatives and their peptides by th...
This paper describes the molecular recognition of the tripeptide Tyr-Leu-Ala by the synthetic recept...
This paper describes the molecular recognition of amino acids by cucurbit[8]uril (Q8) and by the 1:1...
The highly sequence-selective molecular recognition of proteins and peptides in Nature inspires and ...
This article describes the selective recognition and noncovalent dimerization of N-terminal aromatic...
At the forefront of the endeavor to understand and manipulate living systems is the design and study...
This paper describes a novel assay for measuring the relative extent of peptide binding in a large p...
The binding interactions of cucurbit[8]uril (Q[8]) with L-valine, D-leucine, and D-methionine, both ...
The molecular recognition of peptides and proteins in aqueous solution by designed molecules remains...
Biochemical studies have revealed the propensity of aromatic amino acid residues to mediate importan...
Mass spectrometry (MS)-based analysis using enzymatic digestion is widely used for protein sequencin...
The discovery of molecules that bind tightly and selectively to desired proteins continues to drive ...