Abstract
Proteins are characterized by extensive hydrogen bonding that defines regular and irregular substructures. However, hydrogen bonds are weak and insufficient for stabilizing peptide conformation in water. Consequently, the biological activity of peptides is reduced. This led us to test whether a covalent mimic of the hydrogen bond could be used to stabilize peptide conformation in water. A solid-phase synthesis is described for replacing a main-chain hydrogen bond (NH → OCRNH) with a hydrazone link (N−NCH−CH2CH2) in peptides. The synthesis is easy to implement, rapid, and capable of high yields. The replacement of a putative (i + 4 → i) hydrogen bond with the hydrazone at the N terminus of acetyl-GLAGAEAAKA-NH2 (1) to give [JLAZ]AEAAKA-NH2 (2) converts it to a full-length α-helix in water at ambient temperature as indicated by NMR spectroscopy. The observation of weak dαN(i, i + 3), medium dNN(i, i + 1), and strong dαβ(i, i + 3) NOEs that span 2 establish the formation of a full-length α-helix in water. Jα...
Published Version
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