4.4 Article

A Reversible Protection Strategy To Improve Fmoc-SPPS of Peptide Thioesters by the N-Acylurea Approach

Journal

CHEMBIOCHEM
Volume 12, Issue 16, Pages 2488-2494

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/cbic.201100472

Keywords

native chemical ligation; peptides; solid-phase synthesis; thioesters

Funding

  1. NSF [MCB-0845696]
  2. National Institutes of Health [GM083055]
  3. Direct For Biological Sciences
  4. Div Of Molecular and Cellular Bioscience [0845695] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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C-terminal peptide thioesters are an essential component of the native chemical ligation approach for the preparation of fully or semisynthetic proteins. However, the efficient generation of C-terminal thioesters by Fmoc solid-phase peptide synthesis remains a challenge. The recent N-acylurea approach to thioester synthesis relies on the deactivation of one amine of 3,4-diaminobenzoic acid (Dbz) during Fmoc SPPS. Here, we demonstrate that this approach results in the formation of side products through the over-acylation of Dbz, particularly when applied to Gly-rich sequences. We find that orthogonal allyloxycarbonyl (Alloc) protection of a single Dbz amine eliminates these side products. We introduce a protected Fmoc-Dbz(Alloc) base resin that may be directly used for synthesis with most C-terminal amino acids. Following synthesis, quantitative removal of the Alloc group allows conversion to the active N-acyl-benzimidazolinone (Nbz) species, which can be purified and converted in situ to thioester under ligation conditions. This method is compatible with the automated preparation of peptide-Nbz conjugates. We demonstrate that Dbz protection improves the synthetic purity of Gly-rich peptide sequences derived from histone H4, as well as a 44-residue peptide from histone H3.

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