| Literature DB >> 26200065 |
Emiko Matsumoto1, Yuko Fujita1, Yohei Okada2, Esko I Kauppinen2,3, Hidehiro Kamiya2, Kazuhiro Chiba1.
Abstract
C-terminal amidation is one of the most common modification of peptides and frequently found in bioactive peptides. However, the C-terminal modification must be creative, because current chemical synthetic techniques of peptides are dominated by the use of C-terminal protecting supports. Therefore, it must be carried out after the removal of such supports, complicating reaction work-up and product isolation. In this context, hydrophobic benzyl amines were successfully added to the growing toolbox of soluble tag-assisted liquid-phase peptide synthesis as supports, leading to the total synthesis of ABT-510 (2). Although an ethyl amide-forming type was used in the present work, different types of hydrophobic benzyl amines could also be simply designed and prepared through versatile reductive aminations in one step. The standard acidic treatment used in the final deprotection step for peptide synthesis gave the desired C-terminal secondary amidated peptide with no epimerization.Entities:
Keywords: ABT-510; C-terminal amidation; epimerization; hydrophobic benzyl amine; soluble tag-assisted liquid-phase peptide synthesis
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26200065 DOI: 10.1002/psc.2791
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pept Sci ISSN: 1075-2617 Impact factor: 1.905