posted on 2009-11-06, 00:00authored byJosé Luis Baeza, Guillermo Gerona-Navarro, Kevin Thompson, M. Jesús Pérez de Vega, Lourdes Infantes, M. Teresa García-López, Rosario González-Muñiz, Mercedes Martín-Martínez
Reverse turns, a common motif in proteins and peptides, have attracted attention due to their relevance in a wide variety of biological processes. In an attempt to artificially imitate and stabilize these turns in short peptides, we have developed versatile synthetic methodologies for the preparation of 2-alkyl-2-carboxyazetidines and incorporated them into the i + 1 position of model tetrapeptides, where they have shown a tendency to induce γ-turns. However, to ascertain the general utility of these restricted amino acids as γ-type reverse turn inducers, it was then required to study the conformational preferences when located at other positions. To this end, model tetrapeptides R-CO-Ala-Xaa-NHMe, containing differently substituted azetidine moieties (Xaa = Aze, 2-MeAze, 2-BnAze) at the i + 2 position, were synthesized and subjected to a thorough conformational analysis. The theoretical and experimental results obtained, including the X-ray diffraction structure of a dipeptide derivative containing this skeleton, provide evidence that the 2-alkyl-2-carboxyazetidine scaffold is able to efficiently induce γ-turns when incorporated into these short peptides, irrespective of their localization in the peptide chain.