Sugar amino acids (SAAs) were designed as new building blocks carrying an amino group and a carboxyl group on a carbohydrate scaffold. By exploiting standard solid- and solution-phase coupling procedures, linear and cyclic homooligomers containing glucosyluronic acid methylamine (Gum) were synthesized. We achieved a high yield and a very short coupling time for the oligomerization and cyclization of sequences encompassing two, three, four, and six Gum units. The synthesis of cyclic oligomers containing only SAAs as repetitive units has not been reported before. The conformational preferences in aqueous solution of the cyclic derivatives and their applications as potential host molecules are described herein. Benzoic acid and p-nitrophenol were chosen as model guest molecules to study the formation of cyclodextrin-like inclusion complexes. The complexation behavior of the cyclic hexamer was proved from three different points of view: chemical shifts, longitudinal relaxations (T(1)), and diffusion coefficients. All of them showed different values for host and guest molecules measured independently and in the presence of each other.
[structure: see text] Cyclopeptides containing Glucuronic acid methylamine (Gum) alternating with Gly, L-Ala, D-Ala, L-Phe, D-Phe, L-Lys, or D-Lys were synthesized by a combination of solid-phase synthesis and solution chemistry. A more effective pathway to synthesize the sugar amino acid Gum in higher yields and in a shorter period of time was developed. Gum is employed in the benzylated and deprotected form. The cyclopeptides were characterized by NMR and the structure of one deprotected cyclic peptide solved.
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