1989
DOI: 10.1002/hlca.19890720502
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Solubilization of Peptides in Non‐polar Organic Solvents by the Addition of Inorganic Salts: Facts and Implications

Abstract: The solubility of open‐chain peptide derivatives (12 examples) in non‐polar, ether‐type organic solvents may be greatly increased by addition of salts (LiCl, LiBr, LiI, LiBF4, LiClO4, NaI, MgBr2 CaBr2, ZnCl2) or of titanates (Ti(OEt)4, Ti(OCHMe2)4). Examples are reported (Tables 2–6) in which this solubilizing effect leads to peptide concentrations more than one‐hundred‐fold those in the absence of salt (cf, BocAlaGlyGlyGlyOH in THF from 2g·1−1 to ≥ 300 g·1−1 with 6 equiv. of LiCl), 1H‐NMR Spectra of one … Show more

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Cited by 91 publications
(62 citation statements)
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“…Also, the amidine base DBU -in solution [ 1 11 or polymer-bound [ 121 -has been recommended as catalyst for transesterifications, with the reactions carried out at elevated temperatures and with long reaction times. Our discovery was indicative of a strong accelerating effect of LiBr, which reminds of the beneficial influence lithium salts may have on the solubility of peptides [13] and on peptide coupling in solution and in solid-phase synthesis [14]. Since DBU/LiBr is known to be a strong base, in fact much stronger than DBU alone (at least in THF [l-3]), special attention was paid to the question, whether such conditions would be applicable to enolizable substrates with stereogenic centers in the CI -position to a carbonyl group.…”
mentioning
confidence: 87%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Also, the amidine base DBU -in solution [ 1 11 or polymer-bound [ 121 -has been recommended as catalyst for transesterifications, with the reactions carried out at elevated temperatures and with long reaction times. Our discovery was indicative of a strong accelerating effect of LiBr, which reminds of the beneficial influence lithium salts may have on the solubility of peptides [13] and on peptide coupling in solution and in solid-phase synthesis [14]. Since DBU/LiBr is known to be a strong base, in fact much stronger than DBU alone (at least in THF [l-3]), special attention was paid to the question, whether such conditions would be applicable to enolizable substrates with stereogenic centers in the CI -position to a carbonyl group.…”
mentioning
confidence: 87%
“…29,38.30 (CH2(3.1), CH2(3.2)); 48.72, 55.48 (H-C(2.1), H-C(2.2)); 60.99,61.85 (CH3CHJ;80.12 ((CH,),C);126.92,128.61,129.36,136.40 (Ph);155.23 (OCON);170.24,170.70,171.07 (C(l.l), C(1.2), C(4.2)). MS (among others): 873.5 (8), 438 (16),437(61),382(8), 381 (35),338(23),337(100), 190(42), 188(11), 164(15), 154(14), 137(10), 136 (13) Boc-Gly-Gly-OCHMe2 (5c). As described for 5b, with 5a (493 mg, 2 mmol), LiBr (869 mg, 10 mmol), Me,CHOH (10 ml), and DBU (149 PI, 1 mmol) at r.t. over the weekend.…”
Section: Conditions Bmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…LiCliDMPU was the best solvent especially for PDMAA-KG resin. In THF -the solvent it all began with [24] -coupling reactions were very incomplete on all resins, and salt-additives had a negative effect. This was also true for PEO-PS resins where one might have expected a favourable interaction between the ether solvent, the polyether moiety of the support, and Li-salts [24].…”
Section: Dmf Was Used Instead Of Dmf/chci For Swelling Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The excess of LiCl is 10-30 equiv. per mole of peptide in these experiments, an amount of salt found to be sufficient for the maximum conformational change by NMR analysis [I] [10][11][12].…”
Section: Calorimetric Measurements Of Enthalpies Of Interaction Of LImentioning
confidence: 99%