143 research outputs found

    Rapid Flow-Based Peptide Synthesis

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    A flow-based solid-phase peptide synthesis methodology that enables the incorporation of an amino acid residue every 1.8 min under automatic control or every 3 min under manual control is described. This is accomplished by passing a stream of reagent through a heat exchanger into a low volume, low backpressure reaction vessel, and through a UV detector. These features enable continuous delivery of heated solvents and reagents to the solid support at high flow rate, thereby maintaining maximal concentration of reagents in the reaction vessel, quickly exchanging reagents, and eliminating the need to rapidly heat reagents after they have been added to the vessel. The UV detector enables continuous monitoring of the process. To demonstrate the broad applicability and reliability of this method, it was employed in the total synthesis of a small protein, as well as dozens of peptides. The quality of the material obtained with this method is comparable to that for traditional batch methods, and, in all cases, the desired material was readily purifiable by RP-HPLC. The application of this method to the synthesis of the 113-residue Bacillus amyloliquefaciens RNase and the 130-residue DARPin pE59 is described in the accompanying manuscript.MIT Faculty Start-up FundMassachusetts Institute of Technology (Charles E. Reed Faculty Initiative Fund)Deshpande Center for Technological InnovationDamon Runyon-Rachleff (Innovation Award)Sontag Foundation (Distinguished Scientist Award)C. P. Chu and Y. Lai FellowshipDaniel S. Kemp Summer FellowshipNational Institute of General Medical Sciences (U.S.). Biotechnology Training Program (Grant 5T32GM008334-25)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Fellowship F32GM101762

    A Super-Oxidized Radical Cationic Icosahedral Boron Cluster

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    While the icosahedral closo-[B₁₂H₁₂]²⁻ cluster does not display reversible electrochemical behavior, perfunctionalization of this species via substitution of all 12 B–H vertices with alkoxy or benzyloxy (OR) substituents engenders reversible redox chemistry, providing access to clusters in the dianionic, monoanionic, and neutral forms. Here, we evaluated the electrochemical behavior of the electron-rich B₁₂(O-3-methylbutyl)₁₂ (1) cluster and discovered that a new reversible redox event that gives rise to a fourth electronic state is accessible through one-electron oxidation of the neutral species. Chemical oxidation of 1 with [N(2,4-Br₂C₆H₃)₃]·⁺ afforded the isolable [1]·⁺ cluster, which is the first example of an open-shell cationic B₁₂ cluster in which the unpaired electron is proposed to be delocalized throughout the boron cluster core. The oxidation of 1 is also chemically reversible, where treatment of [1]·⁺ with ferrocene resulted in its reduction back to 1. The identity of [1]·⁺ is supported by EPR, UV–vis, multinuclear NMR (¹H, ¹¹B), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic characterization

    A Super-Oxidized Radical Cationic Icosahedral Boron Cluster

    Get PDF
    While the icosahedral closo-[B₁₂H₁₂]²⁻ cluster does not display reversible electrochemical behavior, perfunctionalization of this species via substitution of all 12 B–H vertices with alkoxy or benzyloxy (OR) substituents engenders reversible redox chemistry, providing access to clusters in the dianionic, monoanionic, and neutral forms. Here, we evaluated the electrochemical behavior of the electron-rich B₁₂(O-3-methylbutyl)₁₂ (1) cluster and discovered that a new reversible redox event that gives rise to a fourth electronic state is accessible through one-electron oxidation of the neutral species. Chemical oxidation of 1 with [N(2,4-Br₂C₆H₃)₃]·⁺ afforded the isolable [1]·⁺ cluster, which is the first example of an open-shell cationic B₁₂ cluster in which the unpaired electron is proposed to be delocalized throughout the boron cluster core. The oxidation of 1 is also chemically reversible, where treatment of [1]·⁺ with ferrocene resulted in its reduction back to 1. The identity of [1]·⁺ is supported by EPR, UV–vis, multinuclear NMR (¹H, ¹¹B), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic characterization

    Enzyme-Catalyzed Macrocyclization of Long Unprotected Peptides

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    A glutathione S-transferase (GST) catalyzed macrocyclization reaction for peptides up to 40 amino acids in length is reported. GST catalyzes the selective SNAr reaction between an N-terminal glutathione (GSH, γ-Glu-Cys-Gly) tag and a C-terminal perfluoroaryl-modified cysteine on the same polypeptide chain. Cyclic peptides ranging from 9 to 24 residues were quantitatively produced within 2 h in aqueous pH = 8 buffer at room temperature. The reaction was highly selective for cyclization at the GSH tag, enabling the combination of GST-catalyzed ligation with native chemical ligation to generate a large 40-residue peptide macrocycle.Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT startup funds)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (grant GM101762)Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation (Award)Sontag Foundation (Distinguished Scientist Award)Amgen Inc. (Summer Graduate Research Fellowship

    Rectangular Coordination Polymer Nanoplates: Large-Scale, Rapid Synthesis and Their Application as a Fluorescent Sensing Platform for DNA Detection

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    In this paper, we report on the large-scale, rapid synthesis of uniform rectangular coordination polymer nanoplates (RCPNs) assembled from Cu(II) and 4,4′-bipyridine for the first time. We further demonstrate that such RCPNs can be used as a very effective fluorescent sensing platform for multiple DNA detection with a detection limit as low as 30 pM and a high selectivity down to single-base mismatch. The DNA detection is accomplished by the following two steps: (1) RCPN binds dye-labeled single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) probe, which brings dye and RCPN into close proximity, leading to fluorescence quenching; (2) Specific hybridization of the probe with its target generates a double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) which detaches from RCPN, leading to fluorescence recovery. It suggests that this sensing system can well discriminate complementary and mismatched DNA sequences. The exact mechanism of fluorescence quenching involved is elucidated experimentally and its use in a human blood serum system is also demonstrated successfully

    Cysteine Borylation in Unprotected Peptides

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    Synthetic bioconjugation at cysteine (Cys) residues in peptides and proteins has emerged as a powerful tool in chemistry. Soft nucleophilicity of the sulfur in Cys renders an exquisite chemoselectivity with which various functional groups can be placed onto this residue under benign conditions. While a variety of reactions have been successful at producing Cys-based bioconjugates, the majority of these feature sulfur-carbon bonds. We report Cys-borylation, wherein a benchtop stable Pt(II)-based organometallic reagent can be used to transfer a boron-rich cluster onto a sulfur moiety in unprotected peptides forging a boron-sulfur bond. Discovered Cysborylation proceeds at room temperature and is tolerant to a variety of functional groups present in complex polypeptides. The resultant bioconjugates show no additional toxicity compared to their Cys aryl-based congeners. Finally, we demonstrate how the developed Cys-borylation can enhance the proteolytic stability of the produced peptide bioconjugates while maintaining the binding affinity to a protein target
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