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Unexpected Hydrolytic Instability of N-Acylated Amino Acid Amides and Peptides

[Image: see text] Remote amide bonds in simple N-acyl amino acid amide or peptide derivatives 1 can be surprisingly unstable hydrolytically, affording, in solution, variable amounts of 3 under mild acidic conditions, such as trifluoroacetic acid/water mixtures at room temperature. This observation h...

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Autores principales: Samaritoni, J. Geno, Copes, Alexus T., Crews, DeMarcus K., Glos, Courtney, Thompson, Andre L., Wilson, Corydon, O’Donnell, Martin J., Scott, William L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2014
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3985854/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24617596
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jo500273f
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author Samaritoni, J. Geno
Copes, Alexus T.
Crews, DeMarcus K.
Glos, Courtney
Thompson, Andre L.
Wilson, Corydon
O’Donnell, Martin J.
Scott, William L.
author_facet Samaritoni, J. Geno
Copes, Alexus T.
Crews, DeMarcus K.
Glos, Courtney
Thompson, Andre L.
Wilson, Corydon
O’Donnell, Martin J.
Scott, William L.
author_sort Samaritoni, J. Geno
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Remote amide bonds in simple N-acyl amino acid amide or peptide derivatives 1 can be surprisingly unstable hydrolytically, affording, in solution, variable amounts of 3 under mild acidic conditions, such as trifluoroacetic acid/water mixtures at room temperature. This observation has important implications for the synthesis of this class of compounds, which includes N-terminal-acylated peptides. We describe the factors contributing to this instability and how to predict and control it. The instability is a function of the remote acyl group, R(2)CO, four bonds away from the site of hydrolysis. Electron-rich acyl R(2) groups accelerate this reaction. In the case of acyl groups derived from substituted aromatic carboxylic acids, the acceleration is predictable from the substituent’s Hammett σ value. N-Acyl dipeptides are also hydrolyzed under typical cleavage conditions. This suggests that unwanted peptide truncation may occur during synthesis or prolonged standing in solution when dipeptides or longer peptides are acylated on the N-terminus with electron-rich aromatic groups. When amide hydrolysis is an undesired secondary reaction, as can be the case in the trifluoroacetic acid-catalyzed cleavage of amino acid amide or peptide derivatives 1 from solid-phase resins, conditions are provided to minimize that hydrolysis.
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spelling pubmed-39858542015-03-12 Unexpected Hydrolytic Instability of N-Acylated Amino Acid Amides and Peptides Samaritoni, J. Geno Copes, Alexus T. Crews, DeMarcus K. Glos, Courtney Thompson, Andre L. Wilson, Corydon O’Donnell, Martin J. Scott, William L. J Org Chem [Image: see text] Remote amide bonds in simple N-acyl amino acid amide or peptide derivatives 1 can be surprisingly unstable hydrolytically, affording, in solution, variable amounts of 3 under mild acidic conditions, such as trifluoroacetic acid/water mixtures at room temperature. This observation has important implications for the synthesis of this class of compounds, which includes N-terminal-acylated peptides. We describe the factors contributing to this instability and how to predict and control it. The instability is a function of the remote acyl group, R(2)CO, four bonds away from the site of hydrolysis. Electron-rich acyl R(2) groups accelerate this reaction. In the case of acyl groups derived from substituted aromatic carboxylic acids, the acceleration is predictable from the substituent’s Hammett σ value. N-Acyl dipeptides are also hydrolyzed under typical cleavage conditions. This suggests that unwanted peptide truncation may occur during synthesis or prolonged standing in solution when dipeptides or longer peptides are acylated on the N-terminus with electron-rich aromatic groups. When amide hydrolysis is an undesired secondary reaction, as can be the case in the trifluoroacetic acid-catalyzed cleavage of amino acid amide or peptide derivatives 1 from solid-phase resins, conditions are provided to minimize that hydrolysis. American Chemical Society 2014-03-12 2014-04-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3985854/ /pubmed/24617596 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jo500273f Text en Copyright © 2014 American Chemical Society
spellingShingle Samaritoni, J. Geno
Copes, Alexus T.
Crews, DeMarcus K.
Glos, Courtney
Thompson, Andre L.
Wilson, Corydon
O’Donnell, Martin J.
Scott, William L.
Unexpected Hydrolytic Instability of N-Acylated Amino Acid Amides and Peptides
title Unexpected Hydrolytic Instability of N-Acylated Amino Acid Amides and Peptides
title_full Unexpected Hydrolytic Instability of N-Acylated Amino Acid Amides and Peptides
title_fullStr Unexpected Hydrolytic Instability of N-Acylated Amino Acid Amides and Peptides
title_full_unstemmed Unexpected Hydrolytic Instability of N-Acylated Amino Acid Amides and Peptides
title_short Unexpected Hydrolytic Instability of N-Acylated Amino Acid Amides and Peptides
title_sort unexpected hydrolytic instability of n-acylated amino acid amides and peptides
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3985854/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24617596
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jo500273f
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