Carboxyl-reactive Crosslinker Reactive Groups
Very few types of chemical groups are known to provide specific and practical conjugation to carboxylic acids (–COOH), such as occur in proteins and many other biomolecules. Certain diazomethane and diazoacetyl reagents have been used to derivatize small compounds for analysis by HPLC or for fluorescent labeling. Carbonyldiimidazole (CDI) can be used in non-aqueous conditions to activate carboxylic acids for direct conjugation to primary amines (–NH2) via amide bonds.酰胺
Carbodiimide compounds provide the most popular and versatile method for labeling or crosslinking to carboxylic acids. The most readily available and commonly used carbodiimides are the water-soluble EDC for aqueous crosslinking and the water-insoluble DCC for non-aqueous organic synthesis methods.
Chemical structures of carbodiimides EDC and DCC. EDCI (also called EDAC) is 1-ethyl-3-(-3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide hydrochloride, MW 191.70(含HCl). DCC is N',N'-dicyclohexyl carbodiimide, MW 206.32. |
Carbodiimides, as with CDI-mediated conjugation, work by activating carboxyl groups for direct reaction with primary amines via amide bond formation. Because no portion of their chemical structure becomes part of the final bond between conjugated molecules, carbodiimides are considered zero-length carboxyl-to-amine cross linkers.
EDC Reaction Chemistry
EDC reacts with carboxylic acid groups to form an active O-acylisourea intermediate that is easily displaced by nucleophilic attack from primary amino groups in the reaction mixture. The primary amine forms an amide bond with the original carboxyl group, and an EDC by-product is released as a soluble urea derivative. The O-acylisourea intermediate is unstable in aqueous solutions; failure to react with an amine results in hydrolysis of the intermediate, regeneration of the carboxyls, and the release of an N-unsubstituted urea.
Carboxyl-to-amine crosslinking with the popular carbodiimide, EDC. Molecules (1) and (2) can be peptides, proteins or any chemicals that have respective carboxylate and primary amine groups. When they are peptides or proteins, these molecules are tens-to-thousands of times larger than the crosslinker and conjugation arms diagrammed in the reaction. |
EDC crosslinking is most efficient in acidic (pH 4.5) conditions and must be performed in buffers devoid of extraneous carboxyls and amines. MES buffer (4-morpholinoethanesulfonic acid) is a suitable carbodiimide reaction buffer. Phosphate buffers and neutral pH (up to 7.2) conditions are compatible with the reaction chemistry, albeit with lower efficiency; increasing the amount of EDC in a reaction solution can compensate for the reduced efficiency.
N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) or its water-soluble analog (Sulfo-NHS) is often included in EDC coupling protocols to improve efficiency or create dry-stable (amine-reactive) intermediates. EDC couples NHS to carboxyls, forming an NHS ester that is considerably more stable than the O-acylisourea intermediate while allowing for efficient conjugation to primary amines at physiologic pH.
N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) or its water-soluble analog (Sulfo-NHS) is often included in EDC coupling protocols to improve efficiency or create dry-stable (amine-reactive) intermediates. EDC couples NHS to carboxyls, forming an NHS ester that is considerably more stable than the O-acylisourea intermediate while allowing for efficient conjugation to primary amines at physiologic pH.
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EDC is also capable of activating phosphate groups in the presence of imidazole for conjugation to primary amines. The method is sometimes used to modify, label, crosslink or immobilize oligonucleotides through their 5' phosphate groups. |
Applications for EDC Crosslinking
The ability to crosslink primary amines to carboxylic acid groups using EDC is a powerful and versatile tool for crosslinking peptides and proteins, preparing biomolecular probes, and immobilizing macromolecules for use in numerous protein and cell biology detection and analysis methods.Of course, peptides and proteins contain both primary amines and carboxylic acids (N- and C-termini, respectively, as well as in the side-chain of certain amino acids). Thus, EDC enables peptides and proteins to be easily conjugated to one another or to any compounds or solid surfaces that bear either carboxyl or amino groups.
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