Abstract

The synthesis of β-peptoids (i.e., N-substituted β-alanine oligomers) 10 or more residues in length has proven challenging owing to poor coupling efficiency even after extended reaction times, resulting in the substantial generation of deletion sequences and consequently making purification of the target oligomer challenging. To overcome the limitations of conventional approaches, here we examine a synthetic method to rapidly yield sequence specific β- and γ-peptoids with 4–20 repeat units in high purity via alternating monomer addition and deprotection reactions using Fmoc-protected, N-substituted β-alanine- and γ-aminobutyric acid-based monomers in conjunction with microwave-assisted automated solid phase synthesis. By decoupling the secondary amine generation and the oligomer synthesis, this approach circumvents the relatively low reaction efficiency of primary amine alkylation with halogenated propionic or butyric acid to afford secondary amines while retaining the pendant group chemical diversity offered by α-peptoids. We establish the compatibility of this technique with conventional Fmoc-peptide and ‘submonomer’ peptoid syntheses by fabricating several hybrid oligomer sequences including long β- and γ-peptoid oligomers in addition to hybrid α/β, β/peptide, and α/β/γ-systems, thereby confirming the capacity for this approach to yield oligomers with a backbone spacing of three or more atoms between any two residues. Additionally, we demonstrate that mixtures of aromatic amine- and aldehyde-bearing β-peptoids undergo rapid dynamic covalent assembly to afford oligomeric molecular ladders.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call