Premium
The aspartimide problem persists: Fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl‐solid‐phase peptide synthesis (Fmoc‐SPPS) chain termination due to formation of N‐terminal piperazine‐2,5‐diones
Author(s) -
Samson Daniel,
Rentsch Daniel,
Minuth Marco,
Meier Thomas,
Loidl Günther
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of peptide science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.475
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1099-1387
pISSN - 1075-2617
DOI - 10.1002/psc.3193
Subject(s) - piperazine , chemistry , side chain , peptide , nucleophile , stereochemistry , amino acid , derivative (finance) , solid phase synthesis , combinatorial chemistry , organic chemistry , catalysis , biochemistry , polymer , financial economics , economics
Aspartimide (Asi) formation is a notorious side reaction in peptide synthesis that is well characterized and described in literature. In this context, we observed significant amounts of chain termination in Fmoc‐SPPS while synthesizing the N‐terminal Xaa‐Asp‐Yaa motif. This termination was caused by the formation of piperazine‐2,5‐diones. We investigated this side reaction using a linear model peptide and independently synthesizing its piperazine‐2,5‐dione derivative. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data of the side product present in the crude linear peptide proves that exclusively the six‐membered ring is formed whereas the theoretically conceivable seven‐membered 1,4‐diazepine‐2,5‐dione is not found. We propose a mechanism where nucleophilic attack of the N‐terminal amino function takes place at the α‐carbon of the carbonyl group of the corresponding Asi intermediate. In addition, we systematically investigated the impact of (a) different adjacent amino acid residues, (b) backbone protection, and (c) side chain protection of flanking amino acids. The side reaction is directly related to the Asi intermediate. Hence, hindering or avoiding Asi formation reduces or completely suppresses this side reaction.