In modern procedures for total chemical protein synthesis, the concept of chemical ligation plays an essential role in the assembly of target protein polypeptide chains.[1] The peptide a-thioester is the key component for chemical ligation such as native chemical ligation (NCL), direct segment coupling methods, or traceless Staudinger ligation.[2] Thus, substantial effort has been expended on the establishment of peptide-athioester synthesis based on conventional Boc or Fmoc solidphase peptide synthesis (SPPS, Boc = tert-butoxycarbonyl, Fmoc = 9-fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl).[3] However, because of the inherent limitations of SPPS, synthesis of peptide athioesters with more than 50 amino acids (aa) is still challenging. For the preparation of such a polypeptide athioester, an expression method using the intein system has come to be recognized as a robust technology with the capacity to provide polypeptide a-thioesters of more than 50 aa.[4] Inspired by the biological system, we explored an inteinlike chemical methodology for preparing a long peptide athioester by using a native (unprotected) peptide as the starting material. Some groups recently reported thioesterification of E. coli-expressed peptides using acid treatment, but these intriguing methods lead to epimerization of the Cterminal amino acid residue and still have sequence limitations.[5] Thus we set out to find a widely usable new methodology.The key point was the manipulation of an unprotected peptide to install a C-terminal a-thioester. This task appears to require the selective activation of a native amide bond and subsequent thiolysis. Recently, several groups reported elegant methods of activating the peptide backbone to install an a-thioester at the peptide C terminus.[6] In these methods, the activation of the peptide bond was performed by a selective acylation strategy of an Na-amide nitrogen atom at a specific amino acid residue. To examine the thioesterification of unprotected peptides, we focused on the cysteine (Cys) residue, because Cys possesses a thiol group, which might be more easily modified than the other amino acid side chains and thus selectively induce N-acylation. In fact, selective peptide-cleavage methods at the Cys residue employing an Nacylation strategy have been reported for protein sequencing (Scheme 1 a). [7] In these methods, N-acylation is induced by an electrophilic auxiliary group introduced on a Cys side chain (e.g. S-carbonyl group), and this auxiliary group provides the activation of the peptide bond and subsequent hydrolysis. These reports encouraged us to hypothesize the feasibility of the selective activation of a native amide bond at the Cys residue and subsequent thiolysis, instead of hydrolysis, to obtain a peptide a-thioester. However, our preliminary examination of thiolysis for the activated Cys residue did not proceed and regenerated unprotected peptide substrate or hydrolyzed product instead of the desired peptide athioester (Scheme 1 a). Therefore, we have explored a new nucleophile as an alternative to a...