- Lobba, Marco J;
- Fellmann, Christof;
- Marmelstein, Alan M;
- Maza, Johnathan C;
- Kissman, Elijah N;
- Robinson, Stephanie A;
- Staahl, Brett T;
- Urnes, Cole;
- Lew, Rachel J;
- Mogilevsky, Casey S;
- Doudna, Jennifer A;
- Francis, Matthew B
The synthesis of protein-protein and protein-peptide conjugates is an important capability for producing vaccines, immunotherapeutics, and targeted delivery agents. Herein we show that the enzyme tyrosinase is capable of oxidizing exposed tyrosine residues into o-quinones that react rapidly with cysteine residues on target proteins. This coupling reaction occurs under mild aerobic conditions and has the rare ability to join full-size proteins in under 2 h. The utility of the approach is demonstrated for the attachment of cationic peptides to enhance the cellular delivery of CRISPR-Cas9 20-fold and for the coupling of reporter proteins to a cancer-targeting antibody fragment without loss of its cell-specific binding ability. The broad applicability of this technique provides a new building block approach for the synthesis of protein chimeras.