Peptide synthesis

(Redirected from Peptide coupling reagent)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

In organic chemistry, peptide synthesis is the creation of peptides, which are organic compounds in which multiple amino acids bind via peptide bonds which are also known as amide bonds.

Chemistry

Peptides are synthesized by coupling the carboxyl group or C-terminus of one amino acid to the amino group or N-terminus of another.

Liquid-phase synthesis

Liquid-phase peptide synthesis is a classical approach to peptide synthesis. It has been replaced in most labs by solid-phase synthesis (see below). However, it retains usefulness in large-scale production of peptides for industrial purposes.

Solid-phase synthesis

File:SPPS.jpg
Coupling step in solid-phase peptide synthesis

Solid-phase peptide synthesis (SPPS), pioneered by Merrifield, resulted in a paradigm shift within the peptide synthesis community. It is now the accepted method for creating peptides and proteins in the lab in a synthetic manner. SPPS allows the synthesis of natural peptides which are difficult to express in bacteria, the incorporation of unnatural amino acids, peptide/protein backbone modification, and the synthesis of D-proteins, which consist of D-amino acids.

Small solid beads, insoluble yet porous, are treated with functional units ('linkers') on which peptide chains can be built. The peptide will remain covalently attached to the bead until cleaved from it by a reagent such as trifluoroacetic acid. The peptide is thus 'immobilized' on the solid-phase and can be retained during a filtration process, whereas liquid-phase reagents and by-products of synthesis are flushed away.

The general principle of SPPS is one of repeated cycles of coupling-deprotection. The free N-terminal amine of a solid-phase attached peptide is coupled (see below) to a single N-protected amino acid unit. This unit is then deprotected, revealing a new N-terminal amine to which a further amino acid may be attached.

The overwhelmingly important consideration is to generate extremely high yield in each step. For example, if each coupling step were to have 99% yield, a 26-amino acid peptide would be synthesized in 77% final yield (assuming 100% yield in each deprotection); if each step were 95%, it would be synthesized in 25% yield. Thus each amino acid is added in major excess (2~10x) and coupling amino acids together is highly optimized by a series of well-characterized agents.

There are two majorly used forms of SPPS -- Fmoc and Boc. Unlike ribosome protein synthesis, solid-phase peptide synthesis proceeds in a C-terminal to N-terminal fashion. The N-termini of amino acid monomers is protected by these two groups and added onto a deprotected amino acid chain.

Automated synthesizers are available for both techniques, though many research groups continue to perform SPPS manually.

SPPS is limited by yields, and typically peptides and proteins in the range of 70~100 amino acids are pushing the limits of synthetic accessibility. Synthetic difficulty also is sequence dependent; typically amyloid peptides and proteins are difficult to make. Longer lengths can be accessed by using native chemical ligation to couple two peptides together with quantitative yields.

Boc SPPS

When R. B. Merrifield invented SPPS in 1963, it was according to the tBoc method. t-Boc (or Boc) stands for (tert)-(B)utyl (o)xy (c)arbonyl. To remove Boc from a growing peptide chain, acidic conditions are used (usually neat TFA). Removal of side-chain protecting groups and the peptide from the resin at the end of the synthesis is achieved by incubating in hydrofluoric acid (which can be dangerous); for this reason Boc chemistry is generally disfavored. However for complex syntheses Boc is favourable. When synthesizing nonnatural peptide analogs which are base-sensitive (such as depsipeptides), Boc is necessary.

Fmoc SPPS

This method was introduced by Carpino in 1972 and further applied by Atherton in 1978. Fmoc stands for (F)luorenyl-(m)eth(o)xy-(c)arbonyl which describes the Fmoc protecting group, first described as a protecting group by Carpino in 1970. To remove an Fmoc from a growing peptide chain, basic conditions (usually 20% piperidine in DMF) are used. Removal of side-chain protecting groups and peptide from the resin is achieved by incubating in trifluoroacetic acid (TFA), deionized water, and triisopropylsilane. Fmoc deprotection is usually slow because the anionic nitrogen produced at the end is not a particularly favorable product, although the whole process is thermodynamically driven by the evolution of carbon dioxide. The main advantage of Fmoc chemistry is that no hydrofluoric acid is needed. It is therefore used for most routine synthesis.

BOP SPPS

The use of BOP reagent was first described by Castro et al in 1975.

Solid supports

The physical properties of the solid support, and the applications to which it can be utilized, vary with the material from which the support is constructed, the amount of crosslinking, as well as the linker and handle being used.

Polystyrene resin

This is a versatile resin, which is quite useful in multi-well, automated peptide synthesis, due to its minimal swelling in DCM.

Polyamide resin

This too is a useful and versatile resin. It seems to swell much more than polystyrene, in which case it may not be suitable for some automated synthesizers, if the wells are too small.

Protecting groups

Due to amino acid excesses used to ensure complete coupling during each synthesis step, polymerization of amino acids is common in reactions where each amino acid is not protected. In order to prevent this polymerization, protecting groups are used. This adds additional deprotection phases to the synthesis reaction, creating a repeating design flow as follows:

  • Protective group is removed from trailing amino acids in a deprotection reaction
  • Deprotection reagents washed away to provide clean coupling environment
  • Protected amino acids dissolved in a solvent such as dimethylformamide (DMF) are combined with coupling reagents are pumped through the synthesis column
  • Coupling reagents washed away to provide clean deprotection environment

Currently, two protective groups (Fmoc, Boc) are commonly used in solid-phase peptide synthesis. Their lability is caused by the carbamate group which readily releases CO2 for an irreversible decoupling step.

Fmoc protective group

File:Fmoc cleavage.gif
Fmoc cleavage

The Fmoc (9-fluorenylmethyl carbamate) is currently a widely used protective group that is generally removed from the N terminus of a peptide in the iterative synthesis of a peptide from amino acid units. The advantage of Fmoc is that it is cleaved under very mild basic conditions (e.g. piperidine), but stable under acidic conditions. This allows mild acid labile protecting groups that are stable under basic conditions, such as Boc and benzyl groups, to be used on the side-chains of amino acid residues of the target peptide. This orthogonal protecting group strategy is common in the art of organic synthesis.

FMOC is preferred over BOC due to ease of cleavage; however it is less atom-economical, as the fluorenyl group is much larger than the tert-butyl group. Accordingly, prices for FMOC amino acids were high until the large-scale piloting of one of the first synthesized peptide drugs, enfuvirtide, began in the 1990s, when market demand adjusted the relative prices of the two sets of amino acids.

Boc protective group

Before the Fmoc group became popular, the Boc group was commonly used for protecting the terminal amine of the peptide, requiring the use of more acid stable groups for side chain protection in orthogonal strategies. It retains usefulness in reducing aggregation of peptides during synthesis. Boc groups can be added to amino acids with boc anhydride and a suitable base.

File:TBOC.png
Boc cleavage

Benzyloxy-carbonyl (Z) group

Another carbamate based group is the benzyloxy-carbonyl (Z) group. It is removed in harsher conditions: HBr/acetic acid or catalytic hydrogenation. Today it is almost exclusively used for side chain protection.

Alloc protecting group

The allyloxycarbonyl (alloc) protecting group is often used to protect a carboxylic acid, hydroxyl, or amino group when an orthogonal deprotection scheme is required. It is sometimes used when conducting on-resin cyclic peptide formation, where the peptide is linked to the resin by a side-chain functional group. The alloc group can be removed using tetrakis(triphenylphosphine)palladium(0) along with a 37:2:1 mixture of chloroform, acetic acid, and N-methylmorpholine (NMM) for 2 hours. The resin must then be carefully washed 0.5% DIPEA in DMF, 3x10 ml of 0.5% sodium diethylthiocarbamate in DMF, and then 5x10 ml of 1:1 DCM:DMF.

Lithographic protecting groups

For special applications like protein microarrays lithographic protecting groups are used. Those groups can be removed through exposure to light.

Activating groups

For coupling the peptides the carboxyl group is usually activated. This is important for speeding up the reaction. There are two main types of activating groups: carbodiimides and aromatic oximes.

Carbodiimides

File:DCC with alanine.gif
Alanine attaching to DCC

These activating agents were first developed. Most common are dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCC) and diisopropylcarbodiimide (DIC). Reaction with a carboxylic acid yields a highly reactive O-acyl-urea. During artificial protein synthesis (such as Fmoc solid-state synthesizers), the C-terminus is often used as the attachment site on which the amino acid monomers are added. To enhance the electrophilicity of carboxylate group, the negatively charged oxygen must first be "activated" into a better leaving group. DCC is used for this purpose. The negatively charged oxygen will act as a nucleophile, attacking the central carbon in DCC. DCC is temporarily attached to the former carboxylate group (which is now an ester group), making nucleophilic attack by an amino group (on the attaching amino acid) to the former C-terminus (carbonyl group) more efficient. The problem with carbodiimides is that they are too reactive and that they can therefore cause racemization of the amino acid.

Aromatic oximes

File:HOBt.gif
HOBt
File:HOAt.gif
HOAt
File:HOAt neighbouring.gif
Neighbouring group effect of HOAt

To solve the problem of racemization, aromatic oximes were introduced. The most important ones are 1-hydroxy-benzotriazole (HOBt) and 1-hydroxy-7-aza-benzotriazole (HOAt). Others have been developed. These substances can react with the O-acylurea to form an active ester which is less reactive and less in danger of racemization. HOAt is especially favourable because of a neighbouring group effect.[1]

Newer developments omit the carbodiimides totally. The active ester is introduced as a uronium or phosphonium salt of a non-nucleophilic anion (tetrafluoroborate or hexafluorophosphate): HBTU, HATU, PyBOP.

Synthesizing long peptides

Stepwise elongation, in which the amino acids are connected step-by-step in turn, is ideal for small peptides containing between 2 and 100 amino acid residues. Another method is fragment condensation, in which peptide fragments are coupled. Although the former can elongate the peptide chain without racemization, the yield drops if only it is used in the creation of long or highly polar peptides. Fragment condensation is better than stepwise elongation for synthesizing sophisticated long peptides, but its use must be restricted in order to protect against racemization. Fragment condensation is also undesirable since the coupled fragment must be in gross excess, which may be a limitation depending on the length of the fragment.

A new development for producing longer peptide chains is chemical ligation: Unprotected peptide chains react chemoselectively in aqueous solution. A first kinetically controlled product rearranges to form the amide bond. The most common form of native chemical ligation uses a peptide thioester that reacts with a terminal cystein residue.

Cyclic peptides

On resin cyclization

Solution phase cyclization

An example of solid phase peptide synthesis

The following is an outline of the synthetic steps for peptide synthesis on polyamide or polystyrene resin, using the base labile 9-fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl (Fmoc) protecting group. Using the techniques outlined below, one will obtain a peptide which is capped on the N-terminus with and acetyl group, and on the C-terminus with a primary amide (CONH2).

Setting up glassware for manual peptide synthesis

Manual peptide synthesis can be accomplished in a fritted-filter reaction vessel with a three-way valve fitted onto a 1 L side arm vacuum flask by way of a 1-hole stopper. One valve is used to bubble nitrogen, which is first passed through a small column of Drierite, and then into the reaction mixture to agitate the solution and mix reagents. The other valve is used to evacuate excess reaction solutions and wash solvent using a vacuum flask. All glass pieces to be used in Solid-phase synthesis should be treated with a silanizing agent (such as 1-5% dimethyldichlorosilane in DCM) prior to use, to avoid accumulation of static charge, which makes the resin very difficult to handle.

Preparation of polyamide-Rink resin

Polyamide (PL-DMA) resin (1g) is treated with ethylene diamine (40 ml) in a 50 ml Falcon tube overnight on a rocker, then filtered, washed with 5x10 ml of 1:1 dimethylformamide (DMF):dichloromethane (DCM) solution, 5x10 ml of 1:1 DCM, and loaded with Fmoc-Rink using Benzotriazol-1-yl-oxytripyrrolidinophosphonium hexafluorophosphate (PyBOP) (3 eq), 1-Hydroxybenzotriazole Hydrate (HOBt) (3 eq), and Diisopropylethylamine (DIPEA) (6 eq) in 1:1 DCM:DMF. It can then be dried under vacuum and stored at −15 °C until needed.

Handling the resin before, and during synthesis

The resin is first swelled for 15 minutes in 10 ml of 1:1 DCM:DMF and drained. The resin is also washed with 5x10 ml of 1:1 DCM and DMF after each completed amino acid coupling.

Fmoc-deprotection

Fmoc deprotection after each amino acid coupling is accomplished using 2x10 ml of 20% piperidine in DMF, with N2 agitation for 10 minutes each treatment. The resin is then washed with 5x10 ml DMF, followed by 5x10 ml of 1:1 DCM:DMF. An alternate treatment is 1% DBU in DMF; this gentler treatment allows removal of Fmoc groups in the presence of other base-labile moieties.

Adding amino acids

An amino acid is coupled to the deprotected N-terminal amine of the resin, or previously coupled amino acid, using a coupling mixture such as the protected amino acid (3 eq), PyBOP (3 eq), HOBt (3 eq), and DIPEA (6 eq) in 1:1 DCM:DMF until the resin is negative to ninhydrin. Another popular set of coupling conditions is amino acid (4.4 eq), HBTU (4 eq), and DIPEA (8 eq) in DMF. Amino acids can also be purchased as the pre-activated ester, in which case coupling agents such as HBTU and PyBOP are unnecessary.

Monitoring the progress of amino acid couplings

The progress of amino acid couplings can be followed using ninhydrin, or p-chloranil. The ninhydrin solution turns dark blue (positive result) in the presence of a free primary amine but is otherwise colorless (negative result). The p-chloranil solution will turn the resin beads dark black or blue in the presence of a primary amine if acetaldehyde is used as the solvent or in the presence of a secondary amine, if acetone is used instead; the beads remain colorless or pale yellow otherwise. (The tests are outlined below)

Testing by ninhydrin (1)

Add 2 drops of 40% phenol in ethanol, 2 drops of 0.014 mol/L KCN in pyridine, and 4 drops of 5% ninhydrin in ethanol to a microcentrifuge tube along with a spatula tip size sample of resin, then vortex the mixture and heat for 5 minutes at 100 °C.

Testing by chloranil (2)

Add 5 drops of acetone or acetaldehyde, 5 drops of a saturated solution of p-chloranil in toluene, plus a small spatula-tip-size sample of resin to a microcentrifuge tube, then vortex the mixture and allow to stand at room temperature for 5 minutes. Acetone is used for the detection of secondary amines, where acetaldehyde is used for primary amines.

Continuing peptide extension

Once the coupling of the amino acid is complete, the resin is washed, the Fmoc group deprotected with piperidine, and the resin washed again to prepare it for the next coupling. This process is repeated until all necessary amino acids have been added.

Acetylating the N-terminus

After the peptide sequence is completed, the N-terminal amine can be acetylated with 2 ml of 1:1 acetic anhydride and triethylamine in 10 ml of 1:1 DCM:DMF for 1 hour or until negative to ninhydrin, and the resin then washed with 5x10 ml of 1:1 DCM:DMF, before the peptide is cleaved from the resin. The N-terminus can also be left as the free amine if required.

Cleaving the peptide from the resin

The resin is treated with a cocktail of trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) and cleavage scavenger reagents, such as triisopropylsilane (TIPS), 1,2-ethanedithiol, and water (H2O). The choice of scavengers is dependent on the amino acid sequence. The resin is then filtered away, and the combined filtrates allowed to stand for 1 hour to ensure removal of the acid labile protecting groups.

Workup of peptides after cleavage from the resin

The TFA is evaporated to dryness (or a heavy oil or glass if it does not solidify) on the rotary evaporator, followed by the addition of 5 ml of diethyl ether to the flask to precipitate the peptide, and remove the bulk of the by-products. Once the peptide is precipitated with the ether, filter through a sintered glass funnel and redissolve peptide into 60% AcN/ 0.1 %TFA. The peptide solution is then frozen in a dry ice/ethanol bath and lyophilised ( dried). The result is a crude peptide which is stable for a number of years. The peptide can then be purified by Ion-exhange and Reverse Phase chromatography.

Typically preparative HPLC is used to purify the final product. Mass spectrometry data is obtained to ensure the target peptide was obtained.

References

  • Atherton, E.; Sheppard, R.C. (1989). Solid Phase peptide synthesis: a practical approach. Oxford, England: IRL Press. ISBN 0199630674.
  • Stewart, J.M.; Young, J.D. (1984). Solid phase peptide synthesis (2nd edition ed.). Rockford: Pierce Chemical Company. p. 91. ISBN 0935940030.
  • R. B. Merrifield (1963). "Solid Phase Peptide Synthesis. I. The Synthesis of a Tetrapeptide". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 85 (14): 2149–2154. doi:10.1021/ja00897a025.
  1. L. A. Carpino (1993). "1-Hydroxy-7-azabenzotriazole. An efficient peptide coupling additive". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 115 (10): 4397–4398. doi:10.1021/ja00063a082.

de:Merrifield-Synthese Template:WikiDoc Sources