942518-20-9Relevant articles and documents
Total and Semisyntheses of Polymyxin Analogues with 2-Thr or 10-Thr Modifications to Decipher the Structure-Activity Relationship and Improve the Antibacterial Activity
Li, Jian,Guan, Dongliang,Chen, Feifei,Shi, Weiwei,Lan, Lefu,Huang, Wei
, p. 5746 - 5765 (2021/06/01)
Herein, we report the total and semisyntheses of a series of polymyxin analogues with 2-Thr and 10-Thr modifications to reveal the structure-activity relationship (SAR), which has not been fully elucidated previously. We employed two total-synthetic strategies to facilitate the diversified replacements on 2-Thr or 10-Thr, respectively. Moreover, semisynthetic approaches were utilized to achieve selective esterification of 2-Thr or dual esterification of both 2- and 10-Thr. Based on the results of in vitro antibacterial assays, SAR analysis implicated that the replacement of 2-/10-Thr with amino acids carrying hydrophobic side chains can maintain the activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa but had varied effects on other tested Gram-negative bacteria. The aminoacetyl esterification on 2-/10-Thr achieved excellent antibacterial activity, and the compound 76 exhibited 2-8-fold higher activity against different strains and lower toxicity toward the HK-2 cell line. This work explored the SAR of polymyxin 2-/10-Thr and provided a promising strategy for the development of novel polymyxin derivatives.
Optimized syntheses of Fmoc azido amino acids for the preparation of azidopeptides
Pícha, Jan,Budě?ínsky, Milo?,Machá?ková, Kate?ina,Collinsová, Michaela,Jirá?ek, Ji?í
, p. 202 - 214 (2017/04/06)
The rise of CuI-catalyzed click chemistry has initiated an increased demand for azido and alkyne derivatives of amino acid as precursors for the synthesis of clicked peptides. However, the use of azido and alkyne amino acids in peptide chemistry is complicated by their high cost. For this reason, we investigated the possibility of the in-house preparation of a set of five Fmoc azido amino acids: β-azido l-alanine and d-alanine, γ-azido l-homoalanine, δ-azido l-ornithine and ω-azido l-lysine. We investigated several reaction pathways described in the literature, suggested several improvements and proposed several alternative routes for the synthesis of these compounds in high purity. Here, we demonstrate that multigram quantities of these Fmoc azido amino acids can be prepared within a week or two and at user-friendly costs. We also incorporated these azido amino acids into several model tripeptides, and we observed the formation of a new elimination product of the azido moiety upon conditions of prolonged couplings with 2-(1H-benzotriazol-1-yl)-1,1,3,3-tetramethyluronium hexafluorophosphate/DIPEA. We hope that our detailed synthetic protocols will inspire some peptide chemists to prepare these Fmoc azido acids in their laboratories and will assist them in avoiding the too extensive costs of azidopeptide syntheses. Experimental procedures and/or analytical data for compounds 3–5, 20, 25, 26, 30 and 43–47 are provided in the supporting information.
Efficient synthesis of Fmoc-protected azido amino acids
Lau, Yu Heng,Spring, David R.
, p. 1917 - 1919 (2011/10/01)
The efficient two-step synthesis of Fmoc-protected L-azidoalanine and L-azidohomoalanine from readily available Fmoc-protected asparagine and glutamine, respectively, is reported. The synthetic route proceeds in good yield, requires no extra purification steps, and can be carried out on gram scale. The resulting azido amino acids are of sufficient purity for solid-phase peptide synthesis, as demonstrated in the synthesis of a model pentapeptide. Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart New York.