Publication | Closed Access
Exploitation of the Ornithine Effect Enhances Characterization of Stapled and Cyclic Peptides
14
Citations
43
References
2016
Year
Medicinal ChemistryBioorganic ChemistryBiochemistryProtein FoldingNatural SciencesPeptoidArginine ResiduesPeptide LibraryMolecular BiologyPeptide EngineeringDerivatized PeptidePeptide SynthesisCyclic PeptidesProtein EngineeringNon-peptide LigandChemical BiologyBiomolecular Engineering
A method to facilitate the characterization of stapled or cyclic peptides is reported via an arginine-selective derivatization strategy coupled with MS/MS analysis. Arginine residues are converted to ornithine residues through a deguanidination reaction that installs a highly selectively cleavable site in peptides. Upon activation by CID or UVPD, the ornithine residue cyclizes to promote cleavage of the adjacent amide bond. This Arg-specific process offers a unique strategy for site-selective ring opening of stapled and cyclic peptides. Upon activation of each derivatized peptide, site-specific backbone cleavage at the ornithine residue results in two complementary products: the lactam ring-containing portion of the peptide and the amine-containing portion. The deguanidination process not only provides a specific marker site that initiates fragmentation of the peptide but also offers a means to unlock the staple and differentiate isobaric stapled peptides.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1