- Bioorthogonal chemical reporter
In
chemical biology , a bioorthogonal chemical reporter is a tool for tagging and visualizingbiomolecule s. Prescher & Bertozzi defined bioorthogonal chemical reporters as "non-native, non-perturbing chemical handles that can be modified in living systems through highly selective reactions with exogenously delivered probes." It has been used to enrichprotein s and to conduct proteomic analysis.In the early development of the technique,
chemical motif s have to fulfill criteria ofbiocompatibility and selective reactivity in order to qualify as bioorthogonal chemical reporters. Some combinations ofproteinogenic amino acid side chains meet the criteria, as doketone s andaldehyde s (which can tag proteins and somemetabolite s).Azide s andalkyne s are other examples of chemical reporters.A bioorthogonal chemical reporter must be incorporated into a biomolecule. This occurs via
metabolism . The chemical reporter is linked to a substrate, which a cell can metabolize.References
* Prescher, J. A. & Bertozzi, C. R. (2005). Chemistry in living systems. In "Nature chemical biology, 1", 1. 13 – 21.
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