This paper reports procedures for the straightforward in situ generation of Fmoc-amino acid chlorides using bis-(trichloromethyl)carbonate (BTC) and their utilization for difficult couplings during solid-phase peptide synthesis. The BTC-mediated coupling of all Fmoc-protected proteinogenic amino acids to a large variety of N-alkylated amino acid-peptidyl-resin was studied. The majority of the couplings proceeded with quantitative conversion and without racemization. The utilization of BTC-mediated coupling for facile solid-phase synthesis of backbone cyclic peptides is presented.
A library of 18 hexapeptide analogs was synthesized, including sub-libraries of N- or C-methylation of the parent hexapeptide Phe-Gly-Gly-Gly-Gly-Phe, as well as backbone cyclized analogs of each linear analog with various ring sizes. N- or C-methylation as well as cyclization (but not backbone cyclization) have been suggested to improve intestinal permeability and metabolic stability of peptides in general. Here we aimed to assess their applicability to hydrophilic peptides. The intestinal permeability (Papp) of the 18-peptide library was in the range of 0.2-6.8 x 10-6 cm/sec. Based on several tests, we concluded that the absorption mechanism of all tested analogs is paracellular, regardless of the structural or conformational modifications. In all cases, backbone cyclization increased Papp (5-fold) in comparison to the linear analogs due to the smaller 3D size and also dramatically decreased peptide proteolysis by brush border enzymes. N- or C-methylation did not enhance the permeability of the linear analogs in this series.
Protected Nalpha-(aminoallyloxycarbonyl) and Nalpha-(carboxyallyl) derivatives of all natural amino acids (except proline), and their chiral inverters, were synthesized using facile and efficient methods and were then used in the synthesis of Nalpha-backbone cyclic peptides. Synthetic pathways for the preparation of the amino acid building units included alkylation, reductive amination and Michael addition using alkylhalides, aldehydes and alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds, and the corresponding amino acids. The resulting amino acid prounits were then subjected to Fmoc protection affording optically pure amino acid building units. The appropriate synthetic pathway for each amino acid was chosen according to the nature of the side-chain, resulting in fully orthogonal trifunctional building units for the solid-phase peptide synthesis of small cyclic analogs of peptide loops (SCAPELs). Nalpha-amino groups of building units were protected by Fmoc, functional side-chains were protected by t-Bu/Boc/Trt and N-alkylamino or N-alkylcarboxyl were protected by Alloc or Allyl, respectively. This facile method allows easy production of a large variety of amino acid building units in a short time, and is successfully employed in combinatorial chemistry as well as in large-scale solid-phase peptide synthesis. These building units have significant advantage in the synthesis of peptido-related drugs.
IntroductionNecrosis at the tumor center is a common feature of aggressive breast cancers and has been associated with poor prognosis. It is commonly identified by means of invasive histopathology, which often correlates with morbidity and potential tumor cell dissemination, and limits the reconstruction of the whole necrotic domain. In this study we hypothesized that non covalent association to serum albumin (SA) and covalent binding to ligands for tumor-abundant cell receptors should synergistically drive selective accumulation and prolonged retention of imaging and therapeutic agents in breast tumor necrotic domains enabling in vivo identification, imaging and possibly treatment of such tumors.MethodsCyclo-Arg-Gly-Asp-D-Phe-Lys (c(RGDfK)) were conjugated to bacteriochlorophyll-derivatives (Bchl-Ds), previously developed as photodynamic agents, fluorescent probes and metal chelators in our lab. The c(RGDfK) component drives ligation to αVβ3 integrin receptors over-expressed by tumor cells and neo-vessels, and the Bchl-D component associates to SA in a non-covalent manner. STL-6014, a c(RGDfK)-Bchl-D representative, was i.v. injected to CD-1, nude female mice bearing necrotic and non-necrotic human MDA-MB-231-RFP breast cancer tumors. The fluorescence signals of the Bchl-Ds and RFP were monitored over days after treatment, by quantitative whole body imaging and excised tumor/tissue samples derived thereof. Complementary experiments included competitive inhibition of STL-6014 uptake by free c(RGDfK), comparative pharmacokinetics of nonconjugated c(RGDfK) Bchl-D (STL-7012) and of two human serum albumin (HSA) conjugates: HSA-STL-7012 and HSA-STL-6014.ResultsSTL-6014 and STL-7012 formed complexes with HSA (HSA/STL-6014, HSA/STL-7012). STL-6014, HSA-STL-7012 and HSA-STL-6014, selectively accumulated at similar rates, in tumor viable regions over the first 8 h post administration. They then migrated into the necrotic tumor domain and presented tumor half lifetimes (T1/2) in the range of days where T1/2 for HSA-STL-6014 > STL-6014 > HSA-STL-7012. No accumulation of STL-7012 was observed. Pre-injection of c(RGDfK) excess, prevented the uptake of STL-6014 in the small, but not in the large tumors.ConclusionsNon-covalent association to SA and covalent binding to c(RGDfK), synergistically enable the accumulation and prolonged retention of Bchl-Ds in the necrotic regions of tumors. These findings provide novel guidelines and strategy for imaging and treatment of necrotic tumors.
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