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Polypeptides with Quaternary Phosphonium Side Chains: Synthesis, Characterization, and Cell-Penetrating Properties
Author(s) -
Ziyuan Song,
Nan Zheng,
Xiaochu Ba,
Lichen Yin,
Rujing Zhang,
Liang Ma,
Jianjun Cheng
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
biomacromolecules
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.689
H-Index - 220
eISSN - 1526-4602
pISSN - 1525-7797
DOI - 10.1021/bm5001026
Subject(s) - phosphonium , chemistry , side chain , monomer , polyglutamic acid , ring opening polymerization , polymerization , protein quaternary structure , nucleophilic substitution , stereochemistry , polymer chemistry , amino acid , combinatorial chemistry , organic chemistry , biochemistry , polymer , protein subunit , gene
Polypeptides bearing quaternary phosphonium side chains were synthesized via controlled ring-opening polymerization of chlorine-functionalized amino acid N-carboxyanhydride monomers followed by one-step nucleophilic substitution reaction with triethylphosphine. The conformation of the resulting polypeptides can be controlled by modulating the side-chain length and α-carbon stereochemistry. The phosphonium-based poly(l-glutamate) derivatives with 11 σ-bond backbone-to-charge distance adopt stable α-helical conformation against pH and ionic strength changes. These helical, quaternary phosphonium-bearing polypeptides exhibit higher cell-penetrating capability than their racemic and random-coiled analogues. They enter cells mainly via an energy-independent, nonendocytic cell membrane transduction mechanism and exhibit low cytotoxicity, substantiating their potential use as a safe and effective cell-penetrating agent.

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