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Download fileThia Zip Reaction for Synthesis of Large Cyclic Peptides: Mechanisms and Applications†
journal contribution
posted on 1999-04-27, 00:00 authored by James P. Tam, Yi-An Lu, Qitao YuThis paper describes the mechanism and application of an efficient thia zip cyclization that involves
a series of intramolecular rearrangements in a cysteine-rich peptide for the synthesis of large end-to-end cyclic
peptides. Key functional groups required in this reaction include an Nα-cysteine, a thioester, and at least one
internal free thiol in a peptide. The zip reaction is initiated by intramolecular transthioesterification through an
internal thiol with the thioester. A thiolactone is formed under ring−chain tautomeric equilibrium that favors
ring formation in aqueous buffered solution at pH > 7. Successive ring expansions through thiol−thiolactone
exchanges in the direction of the amino terminus lead finally to a large Nα-amino thiolactone which then
undergoes a spontaneous and irreversible ring contraction through a sequence-independent S to N acyl
isomerization to form an end-to-end lactam. The reversible thiolactone exchanges are sequence-dependent,
and the rate-determining steps are shown by rate studies on model peptides. The assistance of internal thiols
in reducing the ring sizes and hence the entropy of the thiolactone exchanges correlates well with cyclization
rates. Zip-assisted end-to-end cyclizations forming 93- and 99-atom rings through a series of small thiolactone
intermediates were 60−200-fold faster under strongly denaturing conditions such as 8 M urea than the
corresponding unassisted lactamization. The thia zip reaction has been applied successfully to the synthesis of
a 31-amino acid cyclic peptide, the naturally occurring cyclopsychotride that shows the antimicrobial activity.
In addition, the thia zip reaction also enables the synthesis of an engineered cyclic 33-amino acid animal
defensin by replacing the end-to-end disulfide with a lactam, which retains the antimicrobial activities of the
native open-chain form.