Amino Acid Polymerization on Silica Surfaces.

Chempluschem

Laboratoire de Réactivité de Surface, LRS, Sorbonne Université Place Jussieu, 75005, Paris, France.

Published: May 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The polymerization of unactivated amino acids is significant for industries like medicinal chemistry and prebiotic studies, with silica being a cost-effective promoter for this reaction.
  • Despite effective amide/peptide bond synthesis on silica, there is limited understanding of the mechanisms behind this reaction and the factors influencing amino acid (AA) behavior on silica surfaces.
  • The review analyzes existing literature on AA adsorption and polymerization mechanisms, discussing how different silica surface properties affect the formation of reaction products and the selectivity in polymerization outcomes.

Article Abstract

The polymerization of unactivated amino acids (AAs) is an important topic because of its applications in various fields including industrial medicinal chemistry and prebiotic chemistry. Silica as a promoter for this reaction, is of great interest owing to its large abundance and low cost. The amide/peptide bond synthesis on silica has been largely demonstrated but suffers from a lack of knowledge regarding its reaction mechanism, the key parameters, and surface features that influence AA adsorption and reactivity, the selectivity of the reaction product, the role of water in the reaction, etc. The present review addresses these problems by summarizing experimental and modeling results from the literature and attempts to rationalize some apparent divergences in published results. After briefly presenting the main types of silica surface sites and other relevant macroscopic features, we discuss the different deposition procedures of AAs, whose importance is often neglected. We address the possible AA adsorption mechanisms including covalent grafting and H-bonding and show that they are highly dependent on silanol types and density. We then consider how the adsorption mechanisms determine the occurrence and outcome of AA condensation (formation of cyclic dimers or of long linear chains), and outline some recent results that suggest significant polymerization selectivity in systems containing several AAs, as well as the formation of specific elements of secondary structure in the growing polypeptide chains.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cplu.202300642DOI Listing

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