4.8 Article

Versatile Peptide Macrocyclization with Diels-Alder Cycloadditions

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 141, Issue 41, Pages 16374-16381

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.9b07578

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [2T32GM008720-16, DP2GM128199-01]
  2. Virginia and D. K. Ludwig Fund for Cancer Research
  3. American Cancer Society North Central Research Scholar Grant [RSG-17-150-01-CDD]

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Macrocyclization can improve bioactive peptide ligands through preorganization of molecular topology, leading to improvement of pharmacologic properties like binding affinity, cell permeability, and metabolic stability. Here we demonstrate that Diels-Alder [4 + 2] cycloadditions can be harnessed for peptide macrocyclization and stabilization within a range of peptide scaffolds and chemical environments. Diels-Alder cyclization of diverse diene-dienophile reactive pairs proceeds rapidly, in high yield and with tunable stereochemical preferences on solid-phase or in aqueous solution. This reaction can be applied alone or in concert with other stabilization chemistries, such as ring-closing olefin metathesis, to stabilize loop, turn, and a-helical secondary structural motifs. NMR and molecular dynamics studies of model loop peptides confirmed preferential formation of endo cycloadduct stereochemistry, imparting significant structural rigidity to the peptide backbone that resulted in augmented protease resistance and increased biological activity of a Diels-Alder cyclized (DAC) RGD peptide. Separately, we demonstrated the stabilization of DAC alpha-helical peptides derived from the ER alpha-binding protein SRC2. We solved a 2.25 angstrom cocrystal structure of one DAC helical peptide bound to ER alpha, which unequivocally corroborated endo stereochemistry of the resulting Diels-Alder adduct, and confirmed that the unique architecture of stabilizing motifs formed with this chemistry can directly contribute to target binding. These data establish Diels-Alder cyclization as a versatile approach to stabilize diverse protein structural motifs under a range of chemical environments.

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