학술논문

On-resin N-methylation of cyclic peptides for discovery of orally bioavailable scaffolds
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Chemical Biology. 7(11)
Subject
Inorganic Chemistry
Chemical Sciences
Animals
Biological Availability
Chemistry
Pharmaceutical
Combinatorial Chemistry Techniques
Computer Simulation
Drug Discovery
Male
Methylation
Molecular Structure
Peptides
Cyclic
Rats
Structure-Activity Relationship
Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Medicinal and biomolecular chemistry
Language
Abstract
Backbone N-methylation is common among peptide natural products and has a substantial impact on both the physical properties and the conformational states of cyclic peptides. However, the specific impact of N-methylation on passive membrane diffusion in cyclic peptides has not been investigated systematically. Here we report a method for the selective, on-resin N-methylation of cyclic peptides to generate compounds with drug-like membrane permeability and oral bioavailability. The selectivity and degree of N-methylation of the cyclic peptide was dependent on backbone stereochemistry, suggesting that conformation dictates the regiochemistry of the N-methylation reaction. The permeabilities of the N-methyl variants were corroborated by computational studies on a 1,024-member virtual library of N-methyl cyclic peptides. One of the most permeable compounds, a cyclic hexapeptide (molecular mass = 755 Da) with three N-methyl groups, showed an oral bioavailability of 28% in rat.