| Literature DB >> 26136402 |
Juliette Fremaux1,2,3, Laura Mauran1,2,3, Karolina Pulka-Ziach1,2,4, Brice Kauffmann5,6,7, Benoit Odaert2,8, Gilles Guichard9,10.
Abstract
Short α-peptides with less than 10 residues generally display a low propensity to nucleate stable helical conformations. While various strategies to stabilize peptide helices have been previously reported, the ability of non-peptide helical foldamers to stabilize α-helices when fused to short α-peptide segments has not been investigated. Towards this end, structural investigations into a series of chimeric oligomers obtained by joining aliphatic oligoureas to the C- or N-termini of α-peptides are described. All chimeras were found to be fully helical, with as few as 2 (or 3) urea units sufficient to propagate an α-helical conformation in the fused peptide segment. The remarkable compatibility of α-peptides with oligoureas described here, along with the simplicity of the approach, highlights the potential of interfacing natural and non-peptide backbones as a means to further control the behavior of α-peptides.Entities:
Keywords: X-ray crystallography; foldamers; helices; oligourea; peptides
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26136402 DOI: 10.1002/anie.201500901
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336