Oligomers of α-aminoisobutyric acid (Aib) are achiral peptides that typically adopt 310 helical conformations in which enantiomeric left- and right-handed conformers are, necessarily, equally populated. Incorporating a single protected chiral residue at the N-terminus of the peptide leads to induction of a screw-sense preference in the helical chain, which may be quantified (in the form of "helical excess") by NMR spectroscopy. Variation of this residue and its N-terminal protecting group leads to the conclusion that maximal levels of screw-sense preference are induced by bulky chiral tertiary amino acids carrying amide protecting groups or by chiral quaternary amino acids carrying carbamate protecting groups. Tertiary L-amino acids at the N-terminus of the oligomer induce a left-handed screw sense, while quaternary L-amino acids induce a right-handed screw sense. A screw-sense preference may also be induced from the second position of the chain, weakly by tertiary amino acids, and much more powerfully by quaternary amino acids. In this position, the L enantiomers of both families induce a right-handed screw sense. Maximal, and essentially quantitative, control is induced by an L-α-methylvaline residue at both positions 1 and 2 of the chain, carrying an N-terminal carbamate protecting group.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jo500714b | DOI Listing |
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl
November 2024
Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, Key Laboratory of Polymer Chemistry and Physics of Ministry of Education, College of Chemical and Molecular Engineering, Peking University, Beijing, 100871, China.
Biological homochirality is a signature of life. Supramolecular polymerization is effective to achieve high hierarchical homochirality in nature, but has not been well-explored. Herein, we report regioselective and homochiral supramolecular polymerization of chiral nanotadpole aggregates made of either synthetic helical poly(phenylacetylene)s or chirality-amplified co-assembly of chiral and achiral poly(phenylacetylene)s.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemistry
May 2024
CY Cergy Paris Université, CNRS, BioCIS, 95000, Cergy Pontoise, France.
Oligomers of the achiral α-aminoisobutyric acid (Aib) adopt a 3 helical conformation in which the screw-sense preference can be controlled by a single chiral residue. The use of the fluorinated residue α-Trifluoromethylalanine (α-TfmAla) revealed a unique way to both induce and measure the screw-sense preference of such oligomers acting as F NMR probe. This work proposes a systematic study of the effect of this fluorinated chiral inducer on the helical screw-sense preference of poly-Aib oligomers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemistry
September 2023
Institute for Complex Molecular Systems and Laboratory of Macromolecular and Organic Chemistry, Eindhoven University of Technology, PO Box 513, 5600 MB, Eindhoven, The Netherlands.
Supramolecular copolymers have typically been studied in the extreme cases, such as self-sorting or highly mixed copolymer systems, while the intermediate systems have been less understood. We have reported the temperature-dependent microstructure in copolymers of triazine- and benzene-derivatives based on charge-transfer interactions with a highly alternating microstructure at low temperatures. Here, we investigate the temperature-dependent copolymerization further and increase the complexity by combining triazine- and benzene-derivatives with opposite preferred helicities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Soc Rev
April 2023
School of Chemistry, University of Bristol, Cantock's Close, Bristol, BS8 1TS, UK.
Biological systems have evolved a number of different strategies to communicate information on the molecular scale. Among these, the propagation of conformational change is among the most important, being the means by which G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) use extracellular signals to modulate intracellular processes, and the way that opsin proteins translate light signals into nerve impulses. The developing field of foldamer chemistry has allowed chemists to employ conformationally well-defined synthetic structures likewise to mediate information transfer, making use of mechanisms that are not found in biological contexts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
November 2022
Department of Chemistry, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, ManchesterM13 9PL, U.K.
Understanding and controlling peptide foldamer conformation in phospholipid bilayers is a key step toward their use as molecular information relays in membranes. To this end, a new F "reporter" tag has been developed and attached to dynamic peptide foldamers. The ()-1-(trifluoromethyl)ethylamido (()-TFEA) reporter was attached to the C-terminus of α-amino--butyric acid (Aib) foldamers.
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