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Total Chemical Synthesis of a Heterodimeric Interchain Bis-Lactam-Linked Peptide: Application to an Analogue of Human Insulin-Like Peptide 3

Nonreducible cystine isosteres represent important peptide design elements in that they can maintain a near-native tertiary conformation of the peptide while simultaneously extending the in vitro and in vivo half-life of the biomolecule. Examples of these cystine mimics include dicarba, diselenide,...

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Autores principales: Karas, John, Shabanpoor, Fazel, Hossain, Mohammed Akhter, Gardiner, James, Separovic, Frances, Wade, John D., Scanlon, Denis B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3830869/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24288548
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/504260
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author Karas, John
Shabanpoor, Fazel
Hossain, Mohammed Akhter
Gardiner, James
Separovic, Frances
Wade, John D.
Scanlon, Denis B.
author_facet Karas, John
Shabanpoor, Fazel
Hossain, Mohammed Akhter
Gardiner, James
Separovic, Frances
Wade, John D.
Scanlon, Denis B.
author_sort Karas, John
collection PubMed
description Nonreducible cystine isosteres represent important peptide design elements in that they can maintain a near-native tertiary conformation of the peptide while simultaneously extending the in vitro and in vivo half-life of the biomolecule. Examples of these cystine mimics include dicarba, diselenide, thioether, triazole, and lactam bridges. Each has unique physicochemical properties that impact upon the resulting peptide conformation. Each also requires specific conditions for its formation via chemical peptide synthesis protocols. While the preparation of peptides containing two lactam bonds within a peptide is technically possible and reported by others, to date there has been no report of the chemical synthesis of a heterodimeric peptide linked by two lactam bonds. To examine the feasibility of such an assembly, judicious use of a complementary combination of amine and acid protecting groups together with nonfragment-based, total stepwise solid phase peptide synthesis led to the successful preparation of an analogue of the model peptide, insulin-like peptide 3 (INSL3), in which both of the interchain disulfide bonds were replaced with a lactam bond. An analogue containing a single disulfide-substituted interchain lactam bond was also prepared. Both INSL3 analogues retained significant cognate RXFP2 receptor binding affinity.
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spelling pubmed-38308692013-11-28 Total Chemical Synthesis of a Heterodimeric Interchain Bis-Lactam-Linked Peptide: Application to an Analogue of Human Insulin-Like Peptide 3 Karas, John Shabanpoor, Fazel Hossain, Mohammed Akhter Gardiner, James Separovic, Frances Wade, John D. Scanlon, Denis B. Int J Pept Research Article Nonreducible cystine isosteres represent important peptide design elements in that they can maintain a near-native tertiary conformation of the peptide while simultaneously extending the in vitro and in vivo half-life of the biomolecule. Examples of these cystine mimics include dicarba, diselenide, thioether, triazole, and lactam bridges. Each has unique physicochemical properties that impact upon the resulting peptide conformation. Each also requires specific conditions for its formation via chemical peptide synthesis protocols. While the preparation of peptides containing two lactam bonds within a peptide is technically possible and reported by others, to date there has been no report of the chemical synthesis of a heterodimeric peptide linked by two lactam bonds. To examine the feasibility of such an assembly, judicious use of a complementary combination of amine and acid protecting groups together with nonfragment-based, total stepwise solid phase peptide synthesis led to the successful preparation of an analogue of the model peptide, insulin-like peptide 3 (INSL3), in which both of the interchain disulfide bonds were replaced with a lactam bond. An analogue containing a single disulfide-substituted interchain lactam bond was also prepared. Both INSL3 analogues retained significant cognate RXFP2 receptor binding affinity. Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2013 2013-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3830869/ /pubmed/24288548 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/504260 Text en Copyright © 2013 John Karas et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Karas, John
Shabanpoor, Fazel
Hossain, Mohammed Akhter
Gardiner, James
Separovic, Frances
Wade, John D.
Scanlon, Denis B.
Total Chemical Synthesis of a Heterodimeric Interchain Bis-Lactam-Linked Peptide: Application to an Analogue of Human Insulin-Like Peptide 3
title Total Chemical Synthesis of a Heterodimeric Interchain Bis-Lactam-Linked Peptide: Application to an Analogue of Human Insulin-Like Peptide 3
title_full Total Chemical Synthesis of a Heterodimeric Interchain Bis-Lactam-Linked Peptide: Application to an Analogue of Human Insulin-Like Peptide 3
title_fullStr Total Chemical Synthesis of a Heterodimeric Interchain Bis-Lactam-Linked Peptide: Application to an Analogue of Human Insulin-Like Peptide 3
title_full_unstemmed Total Chemical Synthesis of a Heterodimeric Interchain Bis-Lactam-Linked Peptide: Application to an Analogue of Human Insulin-Like Peptide 3
title_short Total Chemical Synthesis of a Heterodimeric Interchain Bis-Lactam-Linked Peptide: Application to an Analogue of Human Insulin-Like Peptide 3
title_sort total chemical synthesis of a heterodimeric interchain bis-lactam-linked peptide: application to an analogue of human insulin-like peptide 3
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3830869/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24288548
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/504260
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