4.8 Article

Nanometer-sized amino acids for the synthesis of nanometer-scale water-soluble molecular rods of precise length

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 129, Issue 23, Pages 7272-+

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja072648i

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIA NIH HHS [T32 AG000096, NIA-5T32AG00096] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIGMS NIH HHS [R01 GM049076, R01 GM049076-11, R01 GM049076-12, GM49076, R01 GM049076-13, R01 GM049076-10A2] Funding Source: Medline

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This paper introduces the unnatural amino acid Abc(2K) as a nanometer-length building block for the creation of water-soluble molecular rods of exceptional size. Abc(2K) is a water-soluble variant of the unnatural amino acid 4'-amino-[1,1'-biphenyl]-4-carboxylic acid (Abc) with lysinelike propyloxyammonium side chains at the 2- and 5-positions. The protected building block Fmoc-Abc(2K(Boc))-OH (1) can be used in standard Fmoc-based solid-phase peptide synthesis to create water-soluble rodlike peptides in nanometer unit lengths up to at least ten nanometers. Oligomers up to and including the decamer were easily prepared on a Rink amide resin. These peptides are easy to purify and characterize by standard reverse-phase HPLC, H-1 NMR, and ESI-MS techniques. The Abc(2K) amino acid can be combined with various standard amino acids to provide well behaved hybrid and biologically relevant peptides. Building block 1 is efficiently prepared on a multigram scale from commercially available starting materials by way of the Suzuki cross-coupling reaction. Molecular modeling studies of Abc(2K) oligomers show only minor effects from torsional and bending motions and support a model in which the oligomers are relatively straight and rigid. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) studies are consistent with a model in which the Abc(2K) oligomers behave as rigid rods with a length of 1.0 nm per monomer unit.

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