A general strategy is introduced for the efficient synthetic access of disulfide linked artificial macrocycles via a Ugi four-component reaction (U4CR) followed by oxidative cyclization. The double-mercapto input is proposed for use in the Ugi reaction, thereby yielding all six topologically possible combinations. The protocol is convergent and short and enables the production of novel disulfide peptidomimetics in a highly general fashion.
A general strategy is introduced for the efficient synthetic access of disulfide linked artificial macrocycles via a Ugi four-component reaction (U4CR) followed by oxidative cyclization. The double-mercapto input is proposed for use in the Ugi reaction, thereby yielding all six topologically possible combinations. The protocol is convergent and short and enables the production of novel disulfide peptidomimetics in a highly general fashion.
Cysteine is
the prevailing site
for covalent post-translational modification (PTM) in peptides and
proteins.[1,2] Among the variety of PTMs, the disulfide
bond has gained considerable momentum in biological chemistry as it
occurs instantaneously through oxidative folding in peptides,[3] proteins,[4] hormones,
enzymes, growth factors, toxins, and immunoglobulins.[5] Macrocylization via disulfide bond often improves the potency,
rigidity, target selectivity, and stability of proteases and also
stabilizes the secondary structure of peptides.[6] Disulfides are also a common structural motif in therapeutically
active compunds[7] and nonribosomal natural
products[8,9] having interesting biological activities.[10] For example, screening of disulfide-containing
macrocyclic libraries has yielded potent inhibitors of the insulin-like
growth factor-1 receptor.[11] Unnatural residues
such as d-enantiomers of the amino acid, N-alkylated, α-disubstituted amino acids can be incorporated
to further enhance the biophysical properties of such peptide-based
therapeutics.[12] Chemical synthesis is a
common bottleneck approach for producing disulfide-rich peptides.
Only a handful of approaches have been developed for a convenient
and straightforward preparation of peptides with site-specific disulfide
connectivity.[13] For example, classical
peptide synthesis (solution phase, solid phase, or native chemical
ligation) followed by intramolecular oxidation has been routinely
used to synthesize disulfide-containing peptides.[14] Importantly, orthogonal protection for Cys has to be employed,
and then the peptides are sequentially transformed to site-specific
disulfides. Alternative methods are still demanding for industrial-scale
synthesis. In particular, production of Cys-rich small peptide sequences
in solution or solid phase can be cumbersome. In order to improve
yields and reduce overall production time, Ugi multicomponent reaction
(U-MCR)[15] stands out among all the other
methods when it comes to convergent synthesis of peptides,[16] peptidomimetics,[17] and macrocycles[18] in one or a few simple
steps.Yudin, for example, used protected cysteinepeptides as bifunctional
starting material in the Ugi MCR to afford peptide macrocycle which
were subsequently transformed to disulfide-bridged bicyclic peptide
macrocycles.[19] Surprisingly, however, the
isocyanide derived from enantiopure cysteine and its utility remains
largely unexplored.[20] Hence, we herein
describe the synthesis of the chiral cysteine isocyanide and its application
in the Ugi MCR followed by oxidative cyclization to deliver disulfide-bridged
cyclic peptidomimetics. Overall, the strategy relays on the possible
variations in the acid, amine and aldehyde components, having trityl
protected thiol as a side chain in order to obtain disulfide-containing
cyclic peptidomimetics of variable ring size (Figure ).
Figure 1
Topologically possible Ugi-4CR oxidative disulfide backbone cyclizations
resulting in six different cyclic scaffolds.
Topologically possible Ugi-4CR oxidative disulfide backbone cyclizations
resulting in six different cyclic scaffolds.At the outset of the project, stable
enantiopure isocyanide 2 was synthesized. Classical formylation
with methyl formate
was employed to synthesize formyl-protected Cys(Trt)-OMe 1 starting from cysteine.[21] Nonracemizable
dehydrating conditions viz., triphosgene (0.35 equiv) and N-methyl morpholine (NMM) (2.0 equiv) at −78 °C,
were employed to synthesize isocyanide 2, and its enantiopurity
was checked by chiral SFC [Supporting Information (SI)].[22] The quantitative yield of the
isocyanide was obtained as a pale yellow, odor-free solid by simple
recrystallization from diethyl ether (88%). The isocyanide is bench-stable
at room temperature for several months without any decomposition or
racemization.[23] The isocyanide synthesis
was also conducted on a ∼30 g scale without loss of yield (Scheme ).
Scheme 1
Synthesis of Methyl
(R)-2-Isocyano-3-(tritylthio)propanoate 2
To test the synthetic utility
of this novel isocyanide 2, we carried out a simple Ugi
reaction (U-4CR) to prepare peptide-like
adducts. Thus, the commercially available acid component Fmoc-Cys(Trt)-OH
was reacted in the U-4CR, which we imagined could well be further
used for head-to-tail disulfide formation. To probe optimal reaction
conditions in a classical U-4CR, Fmoc-Cys(Trt)-OH, paraformaldehyde,
benzylamine, and isocyanide 2 were reacted in different
solvents such as MeOH, trifluorethanol (TFE), and hexafluoroisopropanol
(HFIP) under different concentrations and temperatures (SI). Increasing the temperature did not affect
the reaction efficiency and yield. Other solvents such as THF, CH2Cl2, and DMF also decreased the reaction efficiency,
suggesting that the poor solubility of the components in either of
the solvents may have compromised the formation of the Ugi product 3a. Thus, we investigated the use of mixed solvents. Further
optimization resulted in the MeOH/THF/DMF (1:1:0.1, 0.2 M) solvent
mixture which afforded the Ugi product 3a in good 61%
yield. Since our aim was the diverse synthesis of disulfide-bridged
peptides via Ugi cyclization (which is called sulfur-switch Ugi reaction
here), any of the components could carry the protected thiol moiety.
Therefore, with functionalized isocyanide 2 in hand,
any other mercapto side-chain component (acid, amine, or aldehyde)
should be useful. The scope of the optimized U-4CR was first investigated
by changing the amine and aldehyde components but keeping the acid
and isocyanide constant. Not surprisingly, the used amines and aldehydes
displayed good reactivity in the Ugi reaction (Scheme , 3a–i).
For example, the use of methylamine affords N-methylated
peptide adduct 3f in 42% yield upon stirring the reaction
mixture for 30 h at room temperature. Notably, such N-methylated peptides are difficult to synthesize by classical peptide
synthesis. Tritylamine as ammonia synthon was also employed to produce
N-trityl-protected Ugi adduct 3h, which further can be
deprotected easily.[24] A dipeptide acid
was also employed in the Ugi reaction to yield the tetrapeptide adduct 3i in 52% yield. Moreover 2-(tritylthio)ethan-1-amine was
employed for the first time in U-4CR to afford products such as 3j in 66% yield. This amine is an interesting building block
to generate unprecedented classes of peptidomimetic artificial macrocycles
through MCR. The trityl-protected mercapto acetaldehyde was also employed
in U-4CR to afford Ugi adduct 3k in 32% yield, which
could serve as promising synthon for the synthesis of glutathione
mimetics through U-4CR.[25]
Scheme 2
U-4CR Involving
Isocyanide 2 and Disulfide Formation
Isolated yields and diastereomeric
ratios of Ugi products 3 and disulfides 4 are provided.
U-4CR Involving
Isocyanide 2 and Disulfide Formation
Isolated yields and diastereomeric
ratios of Ugi products 3 and disulfides 4 are provided.Overall,
the U-4CR turned out to be quite general, affording the
Ugi products in moderate to good yield. Simple column purification
was employed to isolate the products. When paraformaldehyde was used,
the Ugi product was obtained as a single diastereomer. Stereochemical
retention of the isocyanide under the reaction conditions was unambiguously
shown by chiral SFC (SI). Other aldehydes
afforded the Ugi products as a mixture of diastereomers.Having diverse Ugi adducts
in hand, we focused on the peptide cyclization
through disulfide bond formation. Various oxidative methods have been
previously employed such as air, DMSO, iodine, thallium salts, mercury
salts, and carbon tetrachloride.[26] Recently,
NCS was also employed as mild reagent for peptide disulfide cyclization.
However, NCS is not useful when the cysteine is trityl protected.[27] Testing different variations, we finally employed
I2 as oxidant for the present study.[28] All of the Ugi products undergo smooth oxidative cyclization
at room temperature (4 h) in a mixture of dichloromethane and methanol
to yield disulfide-bridged peptidomimetics in good to excellent yields
(Scheme , 4a–k). Interestingly, trityl-protected tertiary
amide as well as Boc-protected amine used are well tolerated under
the iodine-mediated oxidative cyclization, pointing to the possibility
of further orthogonal chemistries.Since methanol is the common
solvent for Ugi and oxidative cyclization,
we also tested the one-pot synthesis of disulfide 4a without
isolating the Ugi adduct 3a. However, it resulted in
complex reaction products that resulted in a more difficult isolation
procedure. Therefore, the two-step procedure with isolation of the
intermediate Ugi adduct is advisable.The obvious advantage
of the present method is the reliable formation
of macrocycles through possible variations in the components. In this
context, examples of other cyclizations of types A, B, and E as shown in Figure were also synthesized in good yield through
our present strategy (Figure ).[29]
Figure 2
Representative examples
of other topologically possible disulfides
synthesized. Isolated yields and diastereomeric ratios are given.
Representative examples
of other topologically possible disulfides
synthesized. Isolated yields and diastereomeric ratios are given.As an application of our method,
we synthesized glutathione derivative 4p in just two
steps (Scheme ). This
tripeptideglutathione (GSH) is the prevalent
nonprotein thiol maintaining the redox status in eukaryotic cells.[30,31]
Scheme 3
Synthesis of GSH Mimetic 4p
Isolated
yield is given for major
diastereomer isolated from column chromatography.
Synthesis of GSH Mimetic 4p
Isolated
yield is given for major
diastereomer isolated from column chromatography.Finally, we tested a reaction wherein all four Ugi components comprise
the S(Trt) group to investigate the random formation of disulfide
bridges (Scheme ).
One-pot regioselective formation of two disulfide bonds in cysteine-rich
peptides has been reported.[32] Several shape
isomers such as globular (1–3, 2–4), ribbon (1–4,
2–3), and beads (1–2, 3–4) can be expected.[33] On this basis, a random disulfide formation
was carried out under high dilution (Scheme ). RP-HPLC analysis of the crude reaction
mixture showed three regioisomers (Figure ) at distinct peaks at 8.9, 9.6, and 10.7
min, and all the three regioisomers showed the expected m/z at 634 (M + H)+. MS/MS fragmentation
analysis suggests that the major isomer formed corresponds to 5a (SI).
Scheme 4
Synthesis of Double Disulfide Bridges and Possible Disulfide Isomers
Conditions: (1) (a) TFE/THF (1:0.5,
0.2 M), rt, 24 h, (b) single diastereomeric Ugi product 3q was isolated and used for cyclization; (2) I2, CH2Cl2/MeOH (10:1), rt, 4 h.
Figure 3
RP-HPLC analysis of the
regiosimers from the crude reaction mixture
after random cyclization with I2.
Synthesis of Double Disulfide Bridges and Possible Disulfide Isomers
Conditions: (1) (a) TFE/THF (1:0.5,
0.2 M), rt, 24 h, (b) single diastereomeric Ugi product 3q was isolated and used for cyclization; (2) I2, CH2Cl2/MeOH (10:1), rt, 4 h.RP-HPLC analysis of the
regiosimers from the crude reaction mixture
after random cyclization with I2.In conclusion, we have introduced the concept of “sulfur
switch” in the Ugi reaction, which can lead to a diverse array
of artificial disulfide bridged macrocycles. Ugi reaction followed
by oxidative cyclization (sulfur-switch Ugi reaction) was demonstrated
as an efficient and short synthesis of disulfide tethered peptidic
macrocycles. Depending on the choice of the Ugi components, medium
8-membered macrocycle and larger 16-membered cycles involving disulfide
rings can be conveniently constructed. Examples of all six topologically
possible structures are described. The enantiopure isocyanide derived
from l-cysteine was synthesized for the first time as a configurationally
stable solid and was employed as a bifunctional component in the Ugi
MCR along with the other three components that can all contain the
protected sulfhydryl. The resulting Ugi adducts were expose to mild
oxidative cyclization conditions to deliver the disulfide peptidomimetics.
The method described herein is very versatile and allows synthesis
of novel peptidomimetics not accessible by other methods. The method
is operationally simple, and overall good yields are obtained in just
two steps. Thus, libraries of these compounds will be valuable additions
to screening libraries such as the European Lead Factory.[34] Our work uncovers the interesting opportunities
for the efficient production of novel class of disulfidepeptides
for biophysical and therapeutic applications. The Ugi products presented
herein offer wide applications for the synthesis peptide thioester,
which is a key intermediate for protein chemical synthesis.[35]
Authors: Barbara Beck; Gregor Larbig; Beatrice Mejat; Marina Magnin-Lachaux; Anne Picard; Eberhardt Herdtweck; Alexander Dömling Journal: Org Lett Date: 2003-04-03 Impact factor: 6.005
Authors: Eman M M Abdelraheem; Michel P de Haan; Pravin Patil; Katarzyna Kurpiewska; Justyna Kalinowska-Tłuścik; Shabnam Shaabani; Alexander Dömling Journal: Org Lett Date: 2017-09-13 Impact factor: 6.005
Authors: Atilio Reyes Romero; Angel Jonathan Ruiz-Moreno; Matthew R Groves; Marco Velasco-Velázquez; Alexander Dömling Journal: J Chem Inf Model Date: 2020-12-03 Impact factor: 6.162