46 research outputs found

    Synthesis of the sequential polypeptide Poly[Cys(ACM)-Ser-Phe-Glu-GLU] as a model for hydrolytic enzymes

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    To construct a possible model of hydrolytic enzymes, the sequential polypeptide H[Cys(Acm)-Ser-Phe-Glu-Glu]nOH, n = 3–110, was prepared by polycondensation of H-Cys(Acm)-Ser(But)-Phe-Glu(OBut)-Glu(OBut)-O Su/1-hydroxybenzotriazole. In a solid state the polypeptide material showed β-conformation both before and after cleavage of t-butyl protecting groups. The pentapeptide unit was synthetized by the Merrifield method utilizing modifications as follows: Gel phase synthesis on < 0.5% cross-linked copolystyrene (quasi dissolved state). Centrifugal reactor. Ddz-amino acids, deprotected by 5% trifluoroacetic acid/dichloromethane/ 15 min. 3-Nitrophthalic anhydride to suppress formation of false sequences. Continuous photometric control of the completion of all operations during synthesis and transesterification, yielding Ddz-Cys(Acm)-Ser(But)-Phe-Glu-(OBut)-Glu(OBut)-OMe (0.827 g; 53%, m.p. 180–182°)

    Influence of the conformation of a macromolecule on the generation of T-cell proliferative response. A study with model polypeptides.

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    International audienceTo study the influence of the conformation of polypeptidic macromolecules on the generation of T-cell epitopes, sequential polypeptides with an octamer repeat unit were designed and synthesized. They adopt mainly unordered and alpha-helical conformations. Among these polypeptides, those containing proline are fully or partly unordered, and are more effective at inducing T-cell proliferation than a proline-free very stable alpha-helical polypeptide. This extremely stable alpha-helical conformation, probably stabilized by aggregation, would enhance its stability against proteolytic processing

    Single channels of 9, 11, 13, 15-destryptophyl-phenylalanyl-gramicidin A.

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    Analysis of the single-channel behavior of an analogue of gramicidin A in which all four tryptophyl residues are substituted by phenylalanyl suggests that the nature of the side chains may play an important role in the ion translocation process. Indeed, while infrared spectroscopy indicates that both peptides have very similar backbone conformations, they have different single-channel characteristics. The unit conductance of the analogue is much smaller than that of the natural product. Moreover, contrary to gramicidin A, it is voltage dependent

    Studies of the influence of different cross-linking reagents on the immune response against a B-epitope.

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    International audienceWe have previously shown that the carrier polytuftsin obtained by polycondensation of tuftsin, a naturally occurring macrophage activator, increases significantly the antibody response against a linked B-epitope. In the present work, we have studied the influence of different cross-linking reagents on the quality of the conjugation and on the immune response, at both B-cell and T-cell levels. We observed that the cross-linking method used for coupling the B-epitope to the carrier influences the immune response. A hypothesis is put forward to explain the differences observed

    Purification of Synthetic Peptide Libraries by Affinity Chromatography Using the Avidin-Biotin System

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    International audienceThe specific interaction between biotin and avidin was exploited in the affinity purification of solid-phase synthesized peptide libraries. During peptide library synthesis, by means of the single-resin method in which coupling on variable positions is carried out using an equimolar mixture of amino acids, biotin was used to cap the unreacted amino groups remaining after coupling of the equimolar amino acid mixture. The following synthesis and deprotection procedures were performed as usual in tert,-butyloxycarbonyl chemistry. The purification of the peptide mixture containing N-biotinylated sequences was performed by affinity chromatography on an avidin-agarose column. The unwanted terminated sequences were retained in the avidin column while the purified peptide mixture was eluted as indicated by reverse-phase HPLC and MS analysis monitoring. The avidin column was regenerated and the biotinylated sequences were released under reversible denaturing conditions. The usefulness of biotinylation for peptide library purification is demonstrated here for the first time for a peptide mixture containing by-products that cannot be separated from the mixture by classical HPLC purification. This purification technique could be applied to all syntheses, presenting difficult reacting steps

    Single Channels of Various Gramicidins

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    Structural features of a chimeric peptide inducing cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses in saline.

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    International audienceLittle information is available correlating the structural properties of peptides with their immunogenicity in terms of responses via cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs). The TT-NP6 chimeric peptide, consisting of two copies of a promiscuous T-helper epitope (T: residues 288-302 from the fusion protein of the measles virus) linked to the NP6 T-cytotoxic epitope (NP6: residues 52-60 from the nucleoprotein of measles virus) was able to induce virus-specific CTL responses in the absence of any adjuvant and hydrophobic component. The present work was undertaken to gain insight into structural features of the TT-NP6 peptide that may be important in optimizing the CTL immunogenicity of the peptide. Circular dichroism data, obtained in a buffer of physiological ionic strength and pH, strongly suggest a self-associated state for the peptide, which was confirmed by a sedimentation velocity experiment. However, helix association is accompanied by loss of overall helical content. Thermal-dependence studies show that the unfolding of self-associated alpha-helices is significantly more pronounced than the unfolding of isolated alpha-helices. Circular dichroism data, together with tryptic limited proteolysis, suggest the presence of a charged amino acid within the hydrophobic core. This study should provide a basis for engineering more effective immunogenic peptides against the measles virus by increasing the stability of the TT-NP6 peptide

    Synthesis of a new carrier for immunization: polytuftsin. Two examples of its use with peptides selected in the hepatitis B surface antigen.

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    International audienceSequential poly(Arg-Thr-Lys-Pro) consisting mainly of the repeat of tuftsin Thr-Lys-Pro-Arg was synthesized by condensing the p-nitrophenyl ester of Arg(HCl)-Thr-Lys-(2-Cl-Z)-Pro in the presence of HOBt. Two haptenic sequences of the Pre-S region of hepatitis B virus antigen (10-26 and 39-55) were prepared by solid phase and coupled to polytuftsin via glutaraldehyde. The peptides, either free or coupled to polytuftsin, were administrated to mice and the antisera were assayed by ELISA. Coupling the peptides to the polypeptide significantly improved the anti-peptide antibody titer in Freund complete adjuvant or in NaCl 0.9%. Cross-reaction between antibodies induced by the peptides and the native protein was also improved. Polytuftsin alone is very poorly immunogenic
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