Submitted by yeeturking t3_xx28my in askscience
FogeltheVogel t1_irayl24 wrote
Reply to comment by CocktailChemist in is it possible to synthesize proteins chemically? by yeeturking
Would it be possible/feasible to do a middle ground, where you take ribosomes outside of a cell, a printed mRNA (AFAIK it's relatively trivial to print DNA and RNA on demand) and those chemically different amino acids on custom tRNA, and have the ribosome assemble the protein?
CrateDane t1_irb9e3f wrote
That's called in vitro translation, and it is an established research method. It's more commonly done with some sort of cell lysate than just ribosomes and charged tRNAs etc. that are directly involved in the reaction.
YourRapeyTeacher t1_irb2u61 wrote
To obtain functional proteins it often requires post-translational modifications. Most commonly this is phosphorylation but you also have various structural modifications, glycosylation (adding sugars), adding lipids and more.
hifructosetrashjuice t1_irc4kdk wrote
or you could make several pieces on solid phase then combine them together. there are many caveats but this can work
-Metacelsus- t1_ircd3lt wrote
Yes, it's called native chemical ligation
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments