Abstract
Solid-phase peptide synthesis in the N-to-C direction, opposite to the classical C-to-N direction of peptide synthesis, provides the synthetically versatile C-terminal carboxyl group for further modification into C-terminally modified peptide mimetics. These are of general interest as potential bioactive agents, particularly as protease inhibitors. Elaboration of peptide mimetics on the solid-phase would facilitate synthesis of peptide mimetic combinatorial libraries. This report describes an effective strategy for solid-phase inverse peptide synthesis based on readily available amino acid tert-butyl esters. The potential of this approach for peptide mimetic synthesis is demonstrated by the solid-phase synthesis of two peptide trifluoromethylketones.
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