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Selective binding and cleavage of peptides : a combinatorial approach

Nold, Matthias Conradin. Selective binding and cleavage of peptides : a combinatorial approach. 2003, Doctoral Thesis, University of Basel, Faculty of Science.

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Official URL: http://edoc.unibas.ch/diss/DissB_7298

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Abstract

This work presents a novel class of two-armed receptors that bind to peptides with high
sequence selectivity. These receptors are composed of a diketopiperazine derived from
hydroxyproline as a template and two peptidic arms. The excellent binding properties
have been rationalised by the analysis of the influence of the template structure on the
binding properties. Exchange of the diketopiperazine against other templates resulted in
an entire loss of intermolecular binding ability. Analysis of the diketopiperazine
conformation by X-ray crystal structure analysis and by 1H-NMR-spectroscopy revealed,
that diketopiperazine receptors with pseudo-axial standing substituents are excellent
templates for two armed receptors. These studies demonstrated that the template has the
largest impact on the binding properties. The second largest effect comes from the first
amino acid that is coupled to the template. The receptors are currently applied for the
development of sensors[69] and liquid crystallin materials70] and might be used for the
development of diagnostics.
The second part shows by the use of a combinatorial fluorophore-quencher library, that
peptides containing two acidic amino acids are preferably cleaved under Fenton
conditions. Such peptides were shown to coordinate to iron more strongly than other
peptides. Due to the iron coordination, upon the addition of ascorbic acid and H2O2,
radicals are generated in the vicinity of the peptide. These peptides are therefore cleaved
more than peptides that are not able to coordinate to iron.
The presented results are designed to serve as a starting point for the development of
selective proteolytic receptors. By coupling a proteolytically active metal complex (e.g.
Fe-EDTA)[71] to, for example a diketopiperazine receptor, peptides will not only be
bound, but, in a second step cleaved selectively (as shown in figure 5.)
Advisors:Wennemers, Helma
Committee Members:Giese, Bernd
Faculties and Departments:05 Faculty of Science > Departement Chemie > Former Organization Units Chemistry > Bioorganische Chemie (Wennemers)
UniBasel Contributors:Wennemers, Helma and Giese, Bernd
Item Type:Thesis
Thesis Subtype:Doctoral Thesis
Thesis no:7298
Thesis status:Complete
Number of Pages:153
Language:English
Identification Number:
edoc DOI:
Last Modified:22 Jan 2018 15:50
Deposited On:13 Feb 2009 15:16

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