Methods For The Synthesis Of Peptide Macrocycles With Embedded Heterocycles

Tech ID: 33491 / UC Case 2024-090-0

Patent Status

Patent Pending

Brief Description

Developing structurally complex peptide macrocycles is a critical strategy for addressing "undruggable" protein-protein interactions. To expand the chemical space available for drug discovery, UC Berkeley researchers have developed a versatile synthesis method that embeds quinoline and other heterocycles directly into the macrocyclic backbone. The approach utilizes substituted 2-aminocarbonyl co-substrates to produce peptide hybrids featuring biaryl atropisomeric axes. These axes provide a unique form of axial chirality that can be engineered to be either conformationally mobile or stable, allowing for the precise three-dimensional "locking" of the peptide into a target-optimal shape. By integrating these rigid pharmacophores, the resulting macrocycles achieve enhanced topological diversity and superior binding affinity compared to traditional cyclic peptides.

Suggested uses

  • Inhibition of Protein-Protein Interactions (PPIs): Utilizing the large surface area and rigid architecture of these macrocycles to block flat, shallow binding sites on disease-relevant proteins.

  • Next-Generation Peptide Therapeutics: Developing orally bioavailable or cell-permeable drug leads that mimic natural binding motifs while offering greater structural complexity.

  • Protease-Resistant Biologics: Engineering stable macrocyclic frameworks that resist enzymatic degradation in the bloodstream, extending the half-life of therapeutic peptides.

  • High-Throughput Screening Libraries: Creating diverse libraries of atropisomeric peptide hybrids for the identification of selective binders to challenging intracellular targets.

  • Biochemical Probes: Designing highly specific chemical tools to study protein function and localization in complex biological systems.

Advantages

  • Tunable Conformational Rigidity: The atropisomeric axis allows for "programming" the molecule's shape, ensuring a high-affinity fit with its biological target.

  • Enhanced Metabolic Stability: Heterocycle embedding and macrocyclization significantly improve resistance to proteolysis compared to linear or simple cyclic peptides.

  • Increased Pharmacological Potency: Pre-organizing the binding conformation reduces the entropic penalty of binding, leading to higher potency and selectivity.

  • Modular Synthetic Route: The use of accessible 2-aminocarbonyl co-substrates facilitates the streamlined production of a wide variety of heterocycle-peptide hybrids.

  • Expanded Chemical Space: Introduces topological and stereochemical complexity (axial chirality) that is not available in canonical genetically encoded peptides.

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Inventors

  • Schepartz, Alanna S.

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