We report an integrated solid-phase reductive amination/solid-phase fragment condensation (SPFC) strategy for the replacement of amide bonds in peptide sequences with the aminomethylene ΨCH2-NH amide isostere. N-Fmoc-protected C-terminal peptide α-amino aldehydes were prepared and condensed with the N-terminus of peptide sequences assembled on 2-chlorotrityl chloride (CLTR) resin, followed by efficient imine reduction under mild conditions. Epimerization at the reacting α-amino aldehyde was below 10%, typically in the range of 1-7%. Cleavage from the resin under mild acidic conditions afforded peptides in which native amide bonds were selectively replaced by ΨCH2-NH linkages. In addition, this methodology enables the preparation of suitably protected ΨCH2-NH-containing peptide fragments that are compatible with further solid-phase, fragment-based, or convergent peptide synthesis and modification strategies. The methodology constitutes a general and versatile tool for selective peptide backbone modification with relevance to the development of peptides and peptidomimetics with improved properties and applications in drug design.
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Maria Grigoropoulou
Dimitrios Tolis
Evrydiki Nierri
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry
University of Patras
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Grigoropoulou et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b2577f96eeacc4fcec61d2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d6ob00034g
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