Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

One‐Pot/Sequential Native Chemical Ligation Using <i>N</i>‐Sulfanylethylanilide Peptide

44

Citations

103

References

2012

Year

Abstract

N-Sulfanylethylanilide (SEAlide) peptides were developed with the aim of achieving facile synthesis of peptide thioesters by 9-fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl (Fmoc)-based solid-phase peptide synthesis (Fmoc SPPS). Initially, SEAlide peptides were found to be converted to the corresponding peptide thioesters under acidic conditions. However, the SEAlide moiety was proved to function as a thioester in the presence of phosphate salts and to participate in native chemical ligation (NCL) with N-terminal cysteinyl peptides, and this has served as a powerful protein synthesis methodology. The reactivity of a SEAlide peptide (anilide vs. thioester) can be easily tuned with or without the use of phosphate salts. This interesting property of SEAlide peptides allows sequential three-fragment or unprecedented four-fragment ligation for efficient one-pot peptide/protein synthesis. Furthermore, dual-kinetically controlled ligation, which enables three peptide fragments simultaneously present in the reaction to be ligated in the correct order, was first achieved using a SEAlide peptide. Beyond our initial expectations, SEAlide peptides have served in protein chemistry fields as very useful crypto-peptide thioesters.

References

YearCitations

Page 1