In situ neutralization in Boc-chemistry solid phase peptide synthesis. Rapid, high yield assembly of difficult sequences

Int J Pept Protein Res. 1992 Sep-Oct;40(3-4):180-93. doi: 10.1111/j.1399-3011.1992.tb00291.x.

Abstract

Simple, effective protocols have been developed for manual and machine-assisted Boc-chemistry solid phase peptide synthesis on polystyrene resins. These use in situ neutralization [i.e. neutralization simultaneous with coupling], high concentrations (> 0.2 M) of Boc-amino acid-OBt esters plus base for rapid coupling, 100% TFA for rapid Boc group removal, and a single short (30 s) DMF flow wash between deprotection/coupling and between coupling/deprotection. Single 10 min coupling times were used throughout. Overall cycle times were 15 min for manual and 19 min for machine-assisted synthesis (75 residues per day). No racemization was detected in the base-catalyzed coupling step. Several side reactions were studied, and eliminated. These included: pyrrolidonecarboxylic acid formation from Gln in hot TFA-DMF; chain-termination by reaction with excess HBTU; and, chain termination by acetylation (from HOAc in commercial Boc-amino acids). The in situ neutralization protocols gave a significant increase in the efficiency of chain assembly, especially for "difficult" sequences arising from sequence-dependent peptide chain aggregation in standard (neutralization prior to coupling) Boc-chemistry SPPS protocols or in Fmoc-chemistry SPPS. Reported syntheses include HIV-1 protease(1-50,Cys.amide), HIV-1 protease(53-99), and the full length HIV-1 protease(1-99).

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Acetylation
  • Acyl Carrier Protein / chemical synthesis
  • Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid
  • Formic Acid Esters / chemistry*
  • Glutamine / chemistry
  • HIV Protease / chemical synthesis
  • Mass Spectrometry
  • Peptide Fragments / chemical synthesis
  • Peptides / chemical synthesis*
  • Polystyrenes*
  • Resins, Synthetic*
  • Stereoisomerism
  • Time Factors

Substances

  • Acyl Carrier Protein
  • Formic Acid Esters
  • HIV-1 protease (44-48)
  • HIV-1 protease (89-99)
  • Peptide Fragments
  • Peptides
  • Polystyrenes
  • Resins, Synthetic
  • t-butyloxycarbonyl group
  • Glutamine
  • acyl carrier protein (65-74)
  • HIV Protease