Principal Investigator/Program Director (Last, first, middle): Wang, Ross, E. Steric-free labeling strategies to study disease-related non-histone substrates of post- translational modifications The proposed research will interrogate fluorine-thiol based bioorthogonal reactions for steric-free labeling of post-translational modifications (PTMs). Despite recent advances in biomedical research, diseases are still haunting human beings. Many cancer types remain lethal and are resistant to traditional therapy, while most inflammatory diseases result in chronic or long-term burdens, and there is a lack of selective immunosuppressive on the market. Thus, new therapeutic approaches are needed. PTMs have recently emerged as a class of important biological pathways that could unravel potentially novel therapeutic targets. PTMs modify existing proteins with additional chemical functionalities to modulate protein function, and thereby mediate various cellular activities. Dysregulation of PTM-related proteins has been reported to be key to certain human diseases such as cancer and inflammatory disorders. Yet, the identity of these non-histone proteins has not been fully elucidated. Current research in this area heavily relies on chemical proteomics, which tags target proteins with alkyne or azide- modified PTM cofactors or precursors. These chemical tags on PTM sites can later be derivatized in situ through bio-orthogonal `click chemistry' with a fluorophore for imaging or a biotin affinity probe for pull down and proteomics-based target identification. However, these alkyne/azide- based tags are bulky in length and size, and for many cases alkyne or azide- tagged PTM precursors/cofactors (e.g. for acetylation, methylation) were barely incorporated onto substrates, thereby limiting PTM-related target identification. To solve this issue, an innovative chemical tagging approach will be developed here, which could be steric free, and can be broadly used for the global profiling of proteins related to various types of PTMs that are important to the onset or relapse of human diseases. We hypothesize that unlike azides and alkynes, fluorine labeling can best mimic the intrinsic carbon-hydrogen bond, and is thereby steric free and generally applicable to tag PTM cofactors/precursors. The first research thrust seeks to utilize chemical synthesis to derivatize common PTM cofactor/precursors with fluorine, then to hijack the PTM biological pathway to tag substrate proteins with fluorine, and finally to modify the fluorinated substrate proteins with thiol-derivatized probes for imaging or protein identification. The second research thrust involves the application of this fluorine-thiol tagging strategy to interrogate the substrate proteins of PTMs, which are potentially important to the survival of cancer cells, but not regular cells. The final thrust will investigate the substrates of PTMs which mediate human T cell activation, and are potentially pivotal to the modu...