Synthesis and Conformational Analysis of a Cyclic Peptide Obtained viaitoi+4 Intramolecular Side-Chain to Side-Chain Azide−Alkyne 1,3-Dipolar Cycloaddition

2008 ◽  
Vol 73 (15) ◽  
pp. 5663-5674 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonia Cantel ◽  
Alexandra Le Chevalier Isaad ◽  
Mario Scrima ◽  
Jay J. Levy ◽  
Richard D. DiMarchi ◽  
...  
Biomedicines ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 99 ◽  
Author(s):  
Klaas Decoene ◽  
Willem Vannecke ◽  
Toby Passioura ◽  
Hiroaki Suga ◽  
Annemieke Madder

Flexible in vitro translation (FIT) was used as a screening method to uncover a new methodology for peptide constraining based on the attack of a nucleophilic side-chain functionality onto an oxidized furylalanine side chain. A set of template peptides, each containing furylalanine as furan-modified amino acid and a nucleophilic residue (Cys, His, Lys, Arg, Ser, or Tyr), was produced through FIT. The translation mixtures were treated with N-bromosuccinimide (NBS) to achieve selective furan oxidation and subsequent MALDI analysis demonstrated Lys and Ser as promising residues for cyclisation. Solid-phase peptide synthesis (SPPS) was used to synthesize suitable amounts of material for further in-depth analysis and characterisation. It was found that in the case of the peptide containing lysine next to a furylalanine residue, a one-pot oxidation and reduction reaction leads to the generation of a cyclic peptide featuring a pyrrole moiety as cyclisation motif, resulting from the attack of the lysine side chain onto the oxidized furylalanine side chain. Structural evidence was provided via NMR and the generality of the methodology was explored. We hereby expand the scope of our previously developed furan-based peptide labeling and crosslinking strategy.


Molecules ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (9) ◽  
pp. 2217 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryota Kirikoshi ◽  
Noriyoshi Manabe ◽  
Ohgi Takahashi

Spontaneous deamidation in the Asn-Gly-Arg (NGR) motif that yields an isoAsp-Gly-Arg (isoDGR) sequence has recently attracted considerable attention because of the possibility of application to dual tumor targeting. It is well known that Asn deamidation reactions in peptide chains occur via the five-membered ring succinimide intermediate. Recently, we computationally showed by the B3LYP density functional theory method, that inorganic phosphate and the Arg side chain can catalyze the NGR deamidation using a cyclic peptide, c[CH2CO–NGRC]–NH2. In this previous study, the tetrahedral intermediate of the succinimide formation was assumed to be readily protonated at the nitrogen originating from the Asn side chain by the solvent water before the release of an NH3 molecule. In the present study, we found a new mechanism for the decomposition of the tetrahedral intermediate that does not require the protonation by an external proton source. The computational method is the same as in the previous study. In the new mechanism, the release of an NH3 molecule occurs after a proton exchange between the peptide and the phosphate and conformational changes. The rate-determining step of the overall reaction course is the previously reported first step, i.e., the cyclization to form the tetrahedral intermediate.


1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (11) ◽  
pp. 2733-2750 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saul Wolfe ◽  
Kiyull Yang ◽  
Maged Khalil

Using the MMPEN parameters of Allinger's MMP2(85) force field, a conformational analysis has been performed on four biologically active penicillins; D-ampicillin, L-α-phenoxyethylpenicillin, penicillin G, and penicillin V, and on five biologically inactive or much less active penicillins: L-ampicillin, D-α-phenoxyethylpenicillin, N-methylpenicillin G, 6α-methylpenicillin G, and bisnorpenicillin G. Antibacterial activity is found to be associated with the existence of a global minimum having a compact structure, whose convex face is accessible to a penicillin binding protein (PBP), with the C3-carboxyl group and the side-chain N-H exposed on this face. Using the MMPEP parameters of MMP2(85), a conformational analysis has been performed on phenylacetyl-D-Ala-D-Ala-O−, a peptide model of the normal substrate of a PBP. Labischinski's global minimum has been reproduced, along with structures that correspond to Tipper and Strominger's proposal that the N4—C7 bond of a penicillin corresponds to the Ala–Ala peptide bond, and to Hasan's proposal that the N4—C5 bond of penicillin corresponds to the peptide bond. For both models, conformations of the peptide related to the pseudoaxial and pseudoequatorial conformations of the thiazolidine ring of penicillin G have been examined. It is concluded that penicillin is not a structural analog of the global minimum of the peptide; however, comparisons based on unbound conformations of PBP substrates are unable to determine which model is more appropriate, or which conformation of penicillin G is the biologically significant one. Using the ECEPP/MMPEP strategy, a model of the active site of a PBP has been obtained, following a search of 200,000 structures of the peptide Ac-NH-Val-Gly-Ser-Val-Thr-Lys-NH-Me. This peptide contains the sequence at the active site of a PBP of Streptomyces R61, for which it is also known that the C3-carboxyl group of penicillin binds to the ε-amino group of lysine, and the β-lactam reacts chemically with the serine OH. The lysine and serine side chains and the C-terminal carbonyl group are found to occupy the concave face of the active site model.A strategy for the docking of penicillins or peptides to this model, with full minimization of the conformational energies of the complexes, has been devised. All active penicillins bind through strong hydrogen bonds to the C3-carboxyl group and the side-chain N-H, and with a four-centered relationship between the O-H of serine and the (O)C-N of the β-lactam ring. The geometrical parameters of this relationship are reminiscent of those found in the gas phase transition state of neutral hydration of a carbonyl group. When the energies of formation and geometries of the pseudoaxial and pseudoequatorial penicillin G complexes are examined, there is now a clear preference for the binding of the pseudoaxial conformation, which is the global minimum of the uncomplexed penicillin in this case. A similar examination of the peptide complexes reveals that only the conformation of the peptide that corresponds to Tipper and Strominger's model, and is based on the pseudoaxial conformation of penicillin G, can form a complex with a geometry and energy comparable to those of a biologically active penicillin.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fatime Eren Erol ◽  
Deniz Sinirlioglu ◽  
Sedat Cosgun ◽  
Ali Ekrem Muftuoglu

Synthesis of fluorinated amphiphilic block copolymers via atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) and Cu(I) catalyzed Huisgen 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition (CuAAC) was demonstrated. First, a PEGMA and MMA based block copolymer carrying multiple side-chain acetylene moieties on the hydrophobic segment for postfunctionalization was carried out. This involves the synthesis of a series of P(HEMA-co-MMA) random copolymers to be employed as macroinitiators in the controlled synthesis of P(HEMA-co-MMA)-block-PPEGMA block copolymers by using ATRP, followed by a modification step on the hydroxyl side groups of HEMA via Steglich esterification to afford propargyl side-functional polymer, alkyne-P(HEMA-co-MMA)-block-PPEGMA. Finally, click coupling between side-chain acetylene functionalities and 2,3,4,5,6-pentafluorobenzyl azide yielded fluorinated amphiphilic block copolymers. The obtained polymers were structurally characterized by1H-NMR,19F-NMR, FT-IR, and GPC. Their thermal characterizations were performed using DSC and TGA.


ChemInform ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 20 (32) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. POTGIETER ◽  
P. S. STEYN ◽  
F. R. VAN HEERDEN ◽  
P. H. VAN ROOYEN ◽  
P. L. WESSELS

2018 ◽  
Vol 59 (22) ◽  
pp. 2141-2144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiajun Sheng ◽  
Huan Chang ◽  
Yu Qian ◽  
Mingliang Ma ◽  
Wenhao Hu

1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (8) ◽  
pp. 1271-1276 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Claude Cherton ◽  
Marc Lanson ◽  
Daïf Ladjama ◽  
Yvette Guichon ◽  
Jean-Jacques Basselier

Several syntheses of special isoxazoles bearing a long alkyl or alkenyl side chain in the α position of the nitrogen are presented. A very convenient route in the case of an alkyl side chain is the classical 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of a nitrile-oxide to a vinyl acetate. Although it is a rather long approach, the reaction of hydroxylamine with enone-epoxides represents a new and unequivocal method compatible with alkenyl side chains. The isomerisation of the easily synthesized isoxazoles bearing such substitutents α to the oxygen, by the reaction of their isoxazolium salts with hydroxylamine, is a fast and general method. Another very convenient access to "α-N substituted" isoxazoles is the coupling of magnesium compounds with 3-bromomethyl 5-methyl isoxazole. Keywords: isoxazoles, substitution in the α position of nitrogen.


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