| Literature DB >> 23423830 |
Rüdiger Pipkorn1, Stephan Rawer, Manfred Wiessler, Waldemar Waldeck, Mario Koch, Hans Hermann Schrenk, Klaus Braun.
Abstract
The personalized medicine, also documented as "individualized medicine", is an effective and therapeutic approach. It is designed to treat the disease of the individual patient whose precise differential gene expression profile is well known. The trend in the biomedical and biophysical research shows important consequences for the pharmaceutical drug and diagnostics research. It requires a high variability in the design and safety of target-specific pharmacologically active molecules and diagnostic components for imaging of metabolic processes. A key technology which may fulfill the highest demands during synthesis of these individual drugs and diagnostics is the solid phase synthesis which is congenial to automated manufacturing. Additionally the choice of tools like resins and reagents is pivotal to synthesize drugs and diagnostics in high quality and yields. Here we demonstrate the solid phase synthesis effects dependent on the choice of resin and of the deprotection agent.Entities:
Keywords: peptide nucleic acid (PNA); solid phase peptide synthesis (SPPS).
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23423830 PMCID: PMC3575629 DOI: 10.7150/ijms.5374
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Med Sci ISSN: 1449-1907 Impact factor: 3.738
Figure 5Illustrates a schematized structure of the peptide nucleic acid with the nucleobase sequence TACGGGGAGTTGCAA complementary to the human c-myc RNA Exon II (GenBank AC No.: X00364) 37.
Figure 1Shows the HPLC diagram of the c-myc PNA synthesized on the peptide ABI synthesizer 433A equipped with the special deprotection module with fixed deprotection time. The left picture shows the TentaGel® R RAM high swell Rapp Polymers [loading 0.62 mmol/g] deprotected with piperidine and the right picture exhibits the diagram of the pyrrolidine experiment (detection Ch1 /210 nm). The yields are 6.0 mg (28.8%) deprotected with piperidine and, with pyrrolidine 8.9 mg (42.8%). The product peaks are shown at 11.48 in the left and at 11.565 in the right diagram. The left picture reveals the higher number of peaks compared to the right picture.
Figure 2Also shows the graphs of the HPLC chromatogram of the c-myc PNA synthesized on the peptide synthesizer 433A equipped with the special deprotection module with fixed deprotection time. Here the left side reveals the H-Rink-Amide-ChemMatrix® Resin [loading 0.52 mmol/g] deprotected with piperidine and the right picture exhibit the diagram of the pyrrolidine experiment. (detection A Ch2 /280 nm). The yields are 5.5 mg (26.4%) deprotected with piperidine and, with pyrrolidine 7.8 mg (37.5%). The product peaks are shown at 11.693 in the left and at 11.565 in the right diagram. The left picture displays more peaks than the right picture.
Figure 3Shows the ESI-MS diagrams of the c-myc PNA. The left picture describes the H-Rink-Amide-ChemMatrix® Resin deprotected with pyrrolidine and the right picture depicts the diagram of the reaction product synthesized with the TentaGel® R RAM high swell Rapp Polymer under identical deprotection conditions.
Figure 4Visualizes the deprotection in every coupling step (left bars) and shows a better performance of pyrrolidine (right diagrams in the parts A and B). This is compared to piperidine in the final step. Each measurement was collected after a base treatment of 2.5 minutes. The upper part (A) shows the TentaGel® R RAM high swell Rapp Polymers and the lower part illustrates the H-Rink-Amide-ChemMatrix® Resin bars (B). The products after the deprotection by piperidine are shown in the left column whereas the right column of the figure represents the bars of the pyrrolidine deprotected molecules. The height of the bars represents the amount of the Fmoc-group removed. The apparatus follows a cut off line 5% in front of the first bar. As soon as the second bar is lower then the adjusted value the program continoues, if not, a further deprotection is carried out.