Since the 1990s, α-oxo aldehyde or glyoxylic acid chemistry has inspired a vast array of synthetic tools for tailoring peptide or protein structures, for developing peptides endowed with novel physicochemical properties or biological functions, for assembling a large diversity of bioconjugates or hybrid materials, or for designing peptide-based micro or nanosystems. This past decade, important developments have enriched the α-oxo aldehyde synthetic tool box in peptide bioconjugation chemistry and explored novel applications. The aim of this review is to give a large overview of this creative field.
[reaction: see text] We describe the Fmoc solid-phase synthesis of peptide thioesters based on the alkylation of the safety-catch sulfonamide linker with a protected 2-mercaptoethanol derivative. The thioester is generated on the solid phase after the peptide chain assembly as a consequence of an intramolecular N,S-acyl shift. Depending on the stability of the spacer separating the sulfonamide linker from the resin toward TFA, treatment of the peptidyl resin with TFA led to a soluble or supported deprotected thioester.
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