Abstract

Papain polymerizes l-glutamic acid diethyl ester (Glu-di-OEt) regioselectively, resulting in the formation of poly (γ-ethyl α- l-glutamic acid) with various degrees of polymerization of less than 13. Reaction temperatures below 20 °C were appropriate for the reaction in terms of suppression of non-enzymatic degradation of Glu-di-OEt and an increase in the peptide yield, while the reaction was preceded by a pronounced induction period. Mass spectrometric analyses of the reaction conducted at 0 °C revealed that the accumulation of the initial dimerization product, l-glutamyl- l-glutamic acid triethyl ester (Glu-Glu-tri-OEt), was limited during the induction period, and that a sequential polymer derived from a further elongation of the dimer was the tetramer, but not the trimer. Kinetic analyses of acyl transfer reactions with Glu-di-OEt and Glu-Glu-tri-OEt as acyl acceptors and Nα-benzoyl- l-arginine ethyl ester as an acyl donor affirmed that Glu-Glu-tri-OEt bound more strongly than Glu-di-OEt both to the S- and S′-subsites of papain. Therefore, what occurred during the initial stage of the polymerization was interpreted as follows: the rate of the papain-catalyzed dimerization of Glu-di-OEt was extremely slow, once Glu-Glu-tri-OEt was initially synthesized it exclusively bound to the active site of papain, and then papain utilized the dimer in polymerization effectively rather than the monomer.

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