9 research outputs found
āBridgedā <i>n</i>āĻ* Interactions Can Stabilize Peptoid Helices
Peptoids
are an increasingly important class of peptidomimetic
foldamers comprised of <i>N</i>-alkylglycine units that
have been successfully developed as antimicrobial agents, lung surfactant
replacements, enzyme inhibitors, and catalysts, among many other applications.
Since peptoid secondary structures can be crucial to their desired
functions, significant efforts have been devoted to developing means
of modularly controlling peptoid backbone amide <i>cis</i>ā<i>trans</i> isomerism using side chains. Strategic
engineering of interactions between side chain aromatic rings and
backbone <i>cis</i>-amides (<i>n</i>āĻ*<sub>Ar</sub> interactions) is an attractive strategy for stabilizing
helical structures in <i>N</i>-<i>a</i>-chiral
aromatic peptoids, which are among the most utilized classes of structured
peptoids. Herein, we report the first detailed computational and experimental
study of <i>n</i>āĻ*<sub>Ar</sub> interactions
in models of peptoids containing backbone thioamides, which we term
āthiopeptoidsā. Our work has revealed that these interactions
significantly affect amide rotamerism in both peptoid and thiopeptoid
models via a newly characterized ābridgedā mode of interaction
mediated by the <i>N</i>-Ī±-CāH Ļ orbitals.
Overall, this work elucidates new strategies for controlling both
peptoid and thiopeptoid folding and suggests that thiopeptoids will
be highly structured and therefore potentially useful as therapeutics,
biological probes, and nanostructural engineering elements
āBridgedā <i>n</i>āĻ* Interactions Can Stabilize Peptoid Helices
Peptoids
are an increasingly important class of peptidomimetic
foldamers comprised of <i>N</i>-alkylglycine units that
have been successfully developed as antimicrobial agents, lung surfactant
replacements, enzyme inhibitors, and catalysts, among many other applications.
Since peptoid secondary structures can be crucial to their desired
functions, significant efforts have been devoted to developing means
of modularly controlling peptoid backbone amide <i>cis</i>ā<i>trans</i> isomerism using side chains. Strategic
engineering of interactions between side chain aromatic rings and
backbone <i>cis</i>-amides (<i>n</i>āĻ*<sub>Ar</sub> interactions) is an attractive strategy for stabilizing
helical structures in <i>N</i>-<i>a</i>-chiral
aromatic peptoids, which are among the most utilized classes of structured
peptoids. Herein, we report the first detailed computational and experimental
study of <i>n</i>āĻ*<sub>Ar</sub> interactions
in models of peptoids containing backbone thioamides, which we term
āthiopeptoidsā. Our work has revealed that these interactions
significantly affect amide rotamerism in both peptoid and thiopeptoid
models via a newly characterized ābridgedā mode of interaction
mediated by the <i>N</i>-Ī±-CāH Ļ orbitals.
Overall, this work elucidates new strategies for controlling both
peptoid and thiopeptoid folding and suggests that thiopeptoids will
be highly structured and therefore potentially useful as therapeutics,
biological probes, and nanostructural engineering elements