Peptide tertiary amides (PTAs) are a superfamily of peptidomimetics that include but are not limited to peptides, peptoids and N-methylated peptides. Here we describe a synthetic method which combines both split-and-pool and sub-monomer strategies to synthesize a one-bead one-compound library of PTAs.
Peptidomimetics are great sources of protein ligands. The oligomeric nature of these compounds enables us to access large synthetic libraries on solid phase by using combinatorial chemistry. One of the most well studied classes of peptidomimetics is peptoids. Peptoids are easy to synthesize and have been shown to be proteolysis-resistant and cell-permeable. Over the past decade, many useful protein ligands have been identified through screening of peptoid libraries. However, most of the ligands identified from peptoid libraries do not display high affinity, with rare exceptions. This may be due, in part, to the lack of chiral centers and conformational constraints in peptoid molecules. Recently, we described a new synthetic route to access peptide tertiary amides (PTAs). PTAs are a superfamily of peptidomimetics that include but are not limited to peptides, peptoids and N-methylated peptides. With side chains on both α-carbon and main chain nitrogen atoms, the conformation of these molecules are greatly constrained by sterical hindrance and allylic 1,3 strain. (Figure 1) Our study suggests that these PTA molecules are highly structured in solution and can be used to identify protein ligands. We believe that these molecules can be a future source of high-affinity protein ligands. Here we describe the synthetic method combining the power of both split-and-pool and sub-monomer strategies to synthesize a sample one-bead one-compound (OBOC) library of PTAs.
Peptidomimetics are compounds that mimic the structure of natural peptides. They are designed to retain the bioactivity while overcoming some of the problems associated with natural peptides, including cell permeability and stability against proteolysis1-3. Due to the oligomeric nature of these compounds, large synthetic libraries can be readily accessed through monomeric or sub-monomeric synthetic routes4-7. One of the most studied classes of peptidomimetics is peptoids. Peptoids are oligomers of N-alkylated glycines that can be synthesized easily using a sub-monomer strategy8,9. Many useful protein ligands have been successfully identified from screening large synthetic peptoid libraries against protein targets1,10-14. Nonetheless, “hits” identified from peptoid libraries rarely archive very high affinity towards protein targets1,10-14,22. One major difference between peptoids and natural peptides is that most of the peptoids generally lack the ability to form secondary structure due to the lack of chiral centers and conformational constraints. In order to solve this problem, multiple strategies were developed over the past decade, largely focusing on the modification of side chains contained on the main chain nitrogen atoms15-22. Recently, we have developed a new synthetic route to introduce natural amino acid side chains onto a peptoid backbone to create peptide tertiary amides23.
Peptide tertiary amides (PTAs) are a super family of peptidomimetics that include but are not limited to peptides (R2 = H), peptoids (R1 = H) and N-methylated peptides (R1 ≠ H, R2 = Me). (See Figure 1) Our synthetic route employs naturally occurring amino acids as the source of chirality and side chains on the α-carbon, and commercially available primary amines to provide N-substitutions. Therefore, a larger chemical space than that of simple peptides, peptoids or N-methylated peptides can be explored. Circular dichroism spectra have shown that PTA molecules are highly structured in solution. Characterization of one of the PTA-protein complexes clearly shows that the conformational constraints of PTA are required for binding. Recently, we have also discovered that some of the PTA molecules possess improved cell permeability than their peptoid and peptide counterparts. We believe that these PTA libraries can be a good source of high-affinity ligands for protein targets. In this paper, we will discuss the synthesis of a sample one-bead one-compound (OBOC) PTA library in details along with some improved conditions for the coupling and cleavage of these compounds.
1. Basics of Split-and-pool Synthesis
In order to efficiently generate a large number of compounds on solid phase, split-and-pool synthesis is often employed as a general strategy. As shown in Figure 4, tentagel beads are first split into three portions. Each portion is reacted with a different reagent, generating the first residue on beads. After the first reaction, all three portions are pooled together, mixed, and then split again into three portions. Each portion will again react with a different reagent, generating the second residue on beads. After two split-and-pool steps, nine compounds are generated.
In sub-monomer synthesis, beads are first divided into several portions to react with different bromo acids in the presence of coupling reagent. After washing with solvent, all beads will be pooled together and mixed, then again divided into several portions to react with different primary amines. After amination, all beads are pooled together and washed thoroughly, completing a full monomer on each bead. This process can be repeated till desired diversity is reached.
2. Preparation of Acid Bromide from Natural Amino Acids
In sub-monomer synthesis, the synthesis of each monomer is divided into two separate steps: 1. coupling of acid bromide and 2. amination with primary amines (Figure 2). In order to synthesize a peptide tertiary amide, chiral acid bromides with side chains on the alpha carbon will be prepared from natural amino acids. Here we describe the method of transforming a natural amino acid into the corresponding acid bromide with high stereo fidelity. We use alanine as an example; other amino acids including serine, threonine, aspartic acid, glutamic acid, asparagine, glutamine, glycine, valine, isoleucine, phenylalanine can also be transformed into bromo acids under similar conditions. Note that some of the amino acids with functional groups like phenol, guanidine and amine need to be protected before the transformation. The reaction setup is shown in Figure 3.
Safety Precaution: For the following reactions involving HBr, NaNO2 and other corrosive/toxic chemicals, proper safety equipment like safety goggles, lab coat, and chemical resistant gloves are needed. All reactions should be performed in a fume hood by experienced chemist.
3. Isotopic Labeling of Alanine Using Transaminase
In combinatorial library synthesis, especially in the split-and-pool synthesis of one-bead one-compound (OBOC) libraries, the amount of compound that can be obtained from each bead is relatively small. (Typically 1 pmol to 10 nmol). Additionally, mass spectrometry is widely used for the identification and characterization of the final compound due to its high sensitivity. In order to use mass spectrometry to determine the absolute stereochemistry at the chiral centers of the final PTA products, bromo acid enantiomers should be isotopically labeled before use. Here we describe the method of using transaminase and D2O to label L-alanine.
4. Synthesis of Peptoid Linker Region
The linker region is not required for PTA library synthesis. However, in order to avoid the high background in the lower molecular weight range (100-600) of MALDI mass spectroscopy and to improve the ionization of the compounds, a peptoid linker with multiple polar residues is often used. This peptoid linker can be synthesized through standard peptoid synthesis procedure. Here we will synthesize a pentamer of N-methoxyethyl glycine as the linker (as shown in Figure 5).
5. Split-and-pool Synthesis of PTA Library with (R)- and (S)-2-bromopropionic Acids
Here we describe the synthesis of a small PTA library with a theoretical diversity of 9,261 compounds using the 1 g of beads from step 4.8. Note that a 90 µm tentagel bead contains approximately 2.9 million beads per gram; therefore the redundancy of the library will be 2.9 x 106 / 9,261 = 312 copies. We will use bromoacetic acid, (R)-2-bromopropanoic and isotopic labeled (S)-2-bromopropanoic acid-d4 as the acids, and 7 different amines (A1 ~ A7, see Figure 5 for details) for amination. Syringe reactors and a vacuum manifold will be used to perform the synthesis.
6. Chloranil Test
Here we show three representative MALDI spectrums from a PTA trimer with linker. As shown in Figure 6A, when cleaved under room temperature using 50% TFA/DCM solution, significant degradation is observed. In Figure 6A, peak 593 and 484 correspond to the linker and the PTA trimer respectively, show that the whole molecule was successfully synthesized on bead but degraded during cleavage. When cleaved under low temperature condition as described above, the amount of TFA-induced degradation is greatly suppressed as shown in Figure 6B. The mechanism of such cleavage has been described in previous literatures24, and it is believed to go through an oxazolidine intermediate. PTA molecules can be sequenced by MS/MS and the fragmentation pattern is similar to that of peptides and peptoids, as shown in Figure 6C. PTA molecules synthesized with (S)-2-bromopropanoic acid-d4 generally give broader peak on MS and MS/MS spectra due to the presence of incomplete deuteration products such as (S)-2-bromopropanoic acid-d3 (Figures 7A and 7B). This could be used as an indication of the presence of the R chiral center (inverted from S during amination) during sequencing procedure. We also found that PTA molecules have a tendency to form more sodiated adducts than peptoid/peptide, therefore low sodium water (such as dionized water) and plastic apparatus are preferred (Figure 7C). Another by-product that could be observed in PTA synthesis is the acrylamide formed from the elimination of bromide during amination (Figure 7C). Once the acrylamide is formed, the sequence is terminated. This can be solved by lowering the concentration of the primary amine to 1 M in order to reduce the basicity of the solution. We recommend performing the chloranil test after each acylation step and using mass spectroscopy to check the product after each amination step to ensure the quality of the library.
Figure 1. Structural comparison of peptide, peptoid, PTA and N-methylated peptide. PTA includes peptide (R2 = H), peptoid (R1 = H) and N-methylated peptide (R1 ≠ H, R2 = Me). B) PTA prefers trans amide bond conformation due to the sterical hindrance between two α-side chain. C) PTA also has a preferred conformation due to 1,3 allylic strain between N-substitute and α-side chain. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. Sub-monomer synthesis of peptoid (R1 = H) and PTA (R1 ≠ H). First step is the acid acylation of the amine. Second step is amination with primary amines. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. Reaction setup. A 250 ml three-neck round bottom flask is put in a dry ice/ethylene glycol bath. The middle neck is connected with a 150 ml pressure equalizing dropping funnel. The left and right necks are sealed with a flow control adapter and a septum with a long needle that allows argon flow pass through. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4. Basics of split-and-pool synthesis. Blank beads are split in three portions, treated separately with reactant A, B and C. After the first reaction, all three portions of beads are pooled together and mixed. Pooled beads are split again in three portions and again treated with same reactant for each individual portion. After the second reaction, 9 different compounds are synthesized. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5. Library structure overview. Three PTAs are synthesized after the pentamer peptoid linker. Theoretical diversity, 33 X 73 = 9,261. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 6. Typical MALDI mass spectra of a PTA trimer. A) Trimer PTA cleaved by 50% TFA/DCM under room temperature. PTA structure as shown, [M+1]+=1,077, [M+Na]+=1,098.9, PTA fragmentation from TFA cleavage can be clearly seen on the spectrum. B) Trimer cleaved by 50% TFA/DCM under optimized condition as described in the paper. TFA-induce acid degradation is greatly suppressed. C) MS/MS spectrum of the PTA trimer. Weak y7 (916) signal is observed, this is a typical fragmentation behavior for PTAs. Spectra analyzed and generated by mMass32. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 7. MALDI spectra of PTA synthesis with isotopic labeled monomer and typical by-products. A) MS spectra comparison of PTA molecules synthesized by blue: (R)-2-bromopropanoic [M+1]+=760 [M+Na]+=787 [M+K]+=803 and red: (S)-2-bromopropanoic acid-d4 [M+1]+=764 [M+Na]+=783 [M+K]+=799. B) MS/MS fragmentation patterns of the two molecules shown in A). Note that due to the presence of d1, d2 and d3 spices (incomplete deuteration of alanine), molecules synthesized by (S)-2-bromopropanoic acid-d4 generally give wider peaks. C) Red: Spectrum of a PTA dimer synthesized and cleaved under optimized condition. Blue: PTA dimer synthesized with 2 M methoxyethylamine solution and cleaved in normal filtered water. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Peptide tertiary amides (PTAs) are a superfamily of peptidomimetic oligomers. Besides the well-studied peptides, peptoids and N-methylated peptides, a large portion of compounds within this family remains understudied, majorly due to lack of synthetic method to access general N-alkylated peptides. Here we describe an efficient method to synthesize PTAs with chiral building blocks derived from amino acids. Previously, we have reported to use a new sub-monomer route to synthesis libraries of PTA molecules23. We have shown that PTAs are highly structured oligomers which possess conformational restrains through the backbone. When tested in vivo, PTA molecules showed improved cell permeability and therefore improved activity25. However, alongside with all the advantages, PTAs also come with some synthetic challenges, majorly from the acylation of secondary amines at hindered positions. The α-side chain which provides conformational restriction also brings steric hindrance for the following coupling step. In order to overcome these synthetic challenges, we performed an extensive optimization study and determined BTC as the best coupling reagent for this reaction23.
The key step of the synthetic route is BTC facilitated acylation of the secondary amine. During this process, BTC enables the generation of an acid chloride in situ26,27. Most other coupling reagents, which form either active esters or acid anhydrides as intermediates failed to provide clean acylation for continuous PTA synthesis. The existence of previous PTA units greatly impairs the coupling efficiency of the following PTA unit due to steric hindrance. Therefore, for the synthesis of multiple PTAs, a highly active intermediate with a small leaving group is strongly preferred. Among all the coupling conditions that we tested, in situ generated acid chloride by BTC works the best in our hand. However, even with the highly active acid chlorides, we recommend to avoid highly sterical hindered amines such as α-branched primary amines in library synthesis unless tested in advance. Aromatic amines such as anile often lead to incomplete substitution and thus should also be avoided. During the BTC coupling step, the solution should always be a pale yellow to orange color; a darker colored solution is an indication of overheating and may result in lower yield and increased formation of by-products. This can generally be solved by further cooling of the BTC solution, reduce the size of the reaction and faster transfer of the activated BTC/acid solution. Besides BTC, N-Ethoxycarbonyl-2-ethoxy-1,2-dihydroquinoline (EEDQ) is another coupling reagent that works well in PTA synthesis. The key intermediate is a mixed carbonic anhydride with a relatively small leaving group. In the case of EEDQ, 3 equivalent of EEDQ is dissolved together with the acid in DCM and then applied to the beads at room temperature. The reaction is normally done within 2 hr with mild shaking. This reaction releases CO2 during the reaction; therefore the reaction system should not be closed.
Another key step is the cleavage and the characterization of PTA molecules. A distinctive MS/MS fragmentation pattern has been observed when sequencing PTA molecules via MALDI-MS/MS (Figure 6). It consists with a low intensity of the last y ion (shown in purple in Figure 6C and increased intensity of y6, y5, y4, b2, b3 ions). Analogous patterns have been observed from N-methylated peptide fragmentation in the previous report28. Due to the increased stability of the intermediate oxazolidine, N-methylated peptides tend to give strong b ions28. Moreover, it is well known that N-methylated peptide are acid labile during both TFA cleavage and MALDI mass spectroscopy24,28,29. Mechanistic study has shown that due to the conformational restriction on the backbone, the carbonyl oxygen atom of the preceding residue is often in proximity of the carbonyl group at the cleavage site, thus promoting the formation of the oxazolidine intermediate29. For the reasons mentioned above, both PTAs and N-methylated peptides need to be cleaved from solid supports at low temperature using controlled concentrations of TFA26,30. In our experience, the most convenient cleavage method for individual PTA residues occurs at -20 °C with a pre-cooled, -20 °C solution of 50% TFA/DCM. This procedure greatly suppresses the formation of acid degraded products.
After mastering this technique, library with PTA monomer derived from other natural amino acids such as leucine, phenylalanine, glutamine, etc. can be synthesized as well. A high quality PTA library can be screened against various protein targets using our previously published on-bead screening protocols31. Hit compounds identified from the screening can be characterized by mass spectroscopy and resynthesized for further test using the protocol described above.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors would like to thank Dr. Jumpei Morimoto and Dr. Todd Doran for valuable assistance. This work was supported by a contract from the NHLBI (NO1-HV-00242).
2,4,6 trimethylpyridine | ACROS | 161950010 | CAS:108-75-8 |
2-morpholinoethanamine | Sigma-Aldrich | 06680 | CAS:2038-03-1 |
48% HBr Water solution | ALFA AESAR | AA14036AT | CAS:10035-10-6 |
Acetaldehyde | Sigma-Aldrich | 402788 | CAS:75-07-0 |
Acetonitrile | Fisher | SR015AA-19PS | CAS:75-05-8 |
Anhydrous Tetrahydrofuran (THF) | EMD | EM-TX0277-6 | CAS:109-99-9 |
Benzylamine | Sigma-Aldrich | 185701 | CAS:100-46-9 |
bis(trichloromethyl) carbonate (BTC) | ACROS | 258950050 | CAS:32315-10-9 |
Bromoacetic acid | ACROS | 106570010 | CAS:79-08-3 |
Chloranil | Sigma-Aldrich | 23290 | CAS:118-75-2 |
Cyclohexanemethylamine | Sigma-Aldrich | 101842 | CAS:3218-02-8 |
D2O | Cambridge Isotope | DLM-4-99.8-1000 | CAS:7789-20-0 |
D-alanine | Anaspec | 61387-100 | CAS:338-69-2 |
Dichloromethane (DCM) | Fisher | BJ-NS300-20 | CAS:75-09-2 |
Dimethylformamide (DMF) | Fisher | BJ-076-4 | CAS:68-12-2 |
Ethylene glycol | Oakwood | 44710 | CAS:107-21-1 |
Isopentylamine | Sigma-Aldrich | W321907 | CAS:107-85-7 |
KBr | ACROS | 424070025 | CAS:7758-02-3 |
L-alanine | Anaspec | 61385-100 | CAS:56-41-7 |
3-Methoxypropylamine | Sigma-Aldrich | M25007 | CAS:5332-73-0 |
2-Methoxyethylamine | Sigma-Aldrich | 143693 | CAS:109-85-3 |
N-(3-Aminopropyl)-2-pyrrolidinone | Sigma-Aldrich | 136565 | CAS:7663-77-6 |
N,N'-Diisopropylcarbodiimide (DIC) | ACROS | 115211000 | CAS:693-13-0 |
N,N-Diisopropylethylamine (DIPEA) | Sigma-Aldrich | D125806 | CAS:7087-68-5 |
NaNO2 | ACROS | 424340010 | CAS:7631-99-4 |
NAOD 40% solution in water | ACROS | 200058-506 | CAS:7732-18-5 |
Piperidine | ALFA AESAR | A12442-AE | CAS:110-89-4 |
Piperonylamine | Sigma-Aldrich | P49503 | CAS:2620-50-0 |
Propylamine | Sigma-Aldrich | 240958 | CAS:107-10-8 |
Trifluoroacetic acid | Sigma-Aldrich | 299537 | CAS:76-05-1 |
α-Cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid | Sigma-Aldrich | 39468 | CAS:28166-41-8 |
α-ketoglutarate | ALFA AESAR | AAA10256-22 | CAS:328-50-7 |
Tentagel Resin with RINK linker | Rapp-Polymere | S30023 | |
Alanine transaminase | Roche | 10105589001 | AKA: Glutamate-Pyruvate Transaminase (GPT) |
Incubator | New Brunswick Scientific | Innova44 | |
NMR | Bruker | 400MHz | |
MALDI mass spectrometer | Applied Biosystems | 4800 MALDI-TOF/TOF | |
Lyophilizer | SP Scientific | VirTis benchtop K | |
Syringe reactor | INTAVIS | Reaction Column | 3ml, 5ml, 10ml, 20ml |
Vacuum manifold | Promega | A7231 | Vac-Man |