Advancing Sustainable
Peptide Synthesis by Solvent
Quality Control: Understanding and Mitigating Hydroperoxide in 1-Butyl-2-pyrrolidinone
(NBP)
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Posted on 2024-07-30 - 19:11
While numerous studies aimed at producing peptides in
a sustainable
manner have recently been reported, the impact of the quality of starting
materials on sustainability in peptide synthesis has been less investigated.
Here we report that NBP, a greener dipolar aprotic solvent suitable
for use in SPPS, readily undergoes air oxidation to the corresponding
hydroperoxide (NBP-OOH), which adversely affects oxidation-sensitive
amino acids and peptides. Air, light, elevated temperatures, and common
peptide synthesis reagents such as DIC accelerated the rate of NBP
oxidation. LC-HRMS analyses revealed that air-induced NBP degradation
proceeds via a different mechanism than the previously elucidated
degradation of the closely related NMP while GC–MS of NBP containing
NBP-OOH showed that standard GC-based analytical methods are unsuitable
for NBP-OOH detection, warranting implementation of improved methods
for NBP analyses. Assessment of NBP-OOH-induced Met, Trp, Cys, and
Tyr breakdown revealed not only that NBP-OOH degrades all these oxidation-prone
substrates, but it was also discovered that DITU, previously reported
to suppress N-oxyl radical-induced peptide breakdown,
constitutes an efficient suppressant of hydroperoxide-induced degradation.
Studies on aerial oxidation of additional greener dipolar aprotic
solvents DMSO and DMPU revealed that while the former is stable and
does not cause oxidation, the latter is oxidized extensively upon
air exposure and degrades oxidation-prone substrates to a significant
extent. On the other hand, air bubbling of NBP, DMSO, and DMPU proved
to have an unexpected positive effect on the stability of the α-amino-bound
Fmoc group, a finding that may be leveraged to minimize premature
Fmoc loss during peptide synthesis. Overall, our studies on understanding
and mitigating hydroperoxide formation in greener solvents for peptide
synthesis illustrate the importance of a thorough quality assessment
of starting materials during the development of sustainable synthetic
methods.
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Pawlas, Jan; El-Dine, Tharwat Mohy; Bargen, Katharina von; Bargen, Christoph von; Nilsson, Johan; Ludemann-Hombourger, Olivier; et al. (2024). Advancing Sustainable
Peptide Synthesis by Solvent
Quality Control: Understanding and Mitigating Hydroperoxide in 1-Butyl-2-pyrrolidinone
(NBP). ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.oprd.4c00225