Small peptides containing combinations of cysteine, tyrosine, histidine, and serine residues react with octafluorocyclopentene (OFCP) to afford atypically structured macrocycles through successive vinylic substitutions. The reactions proceed rapidly in air at 0 °C and are tolerant of spectating tryptophan, asparagine, glutamine, and threonine residues. Hexapeptides of consensus sequence YXCXXC displace four fluorine atoms from OFCP to generate fluorinated macrobicyclic compounds that display dual‐turn surfaces. The method provides facile access to a wide range of previously unknown heterocyclic structures.
Octafluorocyclopentene (OFCP) engages linear, unprotected
peptides
in polysubstitution cascades that generate complex fluorinated polycycles.
The reactions occur in a single flask at 0–25 °C and require
no catalysts or heavy metals. OFCP can directly polycyclize linear
sequences using native functionality, or fluorospiroheterocyclic intermediates
can be intercepted with exogenous nucleophiles. The latter tactic
generates molecular hybrids composed of peptides, sugars, lipids,
and heterocyclic components. The platform can create stereoisomers
of both single- and double-looped macrocycles. Calculations indicate
that the latter can mimic diverse protein surface loops. Subsets of
the molecules have low energy conformers that shield the polar surface
area through intramolecular hydrogen bonding. A significant fraction
of OFCP-derived macrocycles tested show moderate to high passive permeability
in parallel artificial membrane permeability assays.
Small peptides containing combinations of cysteine, tyrosine, histidine, and serine residues react with octafluorocyclopentene (OFCP) to afford atypically structured macrocycles through successive vinylic substitutions. The reactions proceed rapidly in air at 0 °C and are tolerant of spectating tryptophan, asparagine, glutamine, and threonine residues. Hexapeptides of consensus sequence YXCXXC displace four fluorine atoms from OFCP to generate fluorinated macrobicyclic compounds that display dual‐turn surfaces. The method provides facile access to a wide range of previously unknown heterocyclic structures.
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