Abstract
Peptide cyclization is often used to introduce conformational rigidity and enhance the physiological stability of the peptide. This study presents a novel late-stage cyclization method for creating thioketal cyclic peptides from bis-cysteine peptides and drugs. Symmetrical cyclic ketones and acetone were found to react with bis-cysteine unprotected peptides efficiently to form thioketal linkages in trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) without any other additive. The attractive features of this method include high chemoselec-tivity, operational simplicity, robustness. In addition, TFA as the reaction solvent can dissolve any unprotected peptide. As a showcase, the dimethyl thioketal versions of lanreotide and octreotide were prepared and evaluated, both of which showed much improved reductive stability and comparable activity.
Supplementary materials
Title
Trifluoroacetic Acid Mediated Additive-free Late-Stage Native Pep-tide Cyclization to Form Disulfide Mimetics via Thioketalization with Ketones
Description
Peptide cyclization is often used to introduce conformational rigidity and enhance the physiological stability of the peptide. This study presents a novel late-stage cyclization method for creating thioketal cyclic peptides from bis-cysteine peptides and drugs. Symmetrical cyclic ketones and acetone were found to react with bis-cysteine unprotected peptides efficiently to form thioketal linkages in trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) without any other additive. The attractive features of this method include high chemoselec-tivity, operational simplicity, robustness. In addition, TFA as the reaction solvent can dissolve any unprotected peptide. As a showcase, the dimethyl thioketal versions of lanreotide and octreotide were prepared and evaluated, both of which showed much improved reductive stability and comparable activity.
Actions