Molecules (Feb 2019)

Fast Amide Bond Cleavage Assisted by a Secondary Amino and a Carboxyl Group—A Model for yet Unknown Peptidases?

  • Igor V. Komarov,
  • Aleksandr Yu. Ishchenko,
  • Aleksandr Hovtvianitsa,
  • Viacheslav Stepanenko,
  • Serhii Kharchenko,
  • Andrew D. Bond,
  • Anthony J. Kirby

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules24030572
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 3
p. 572

Abstract

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Unconstrained amides that undergo fast hydrolysis under mild conditions are valuable sources of information about how amide bonds may be activated in enzymatic transformations. We report a compound possessing an unconstrained amide bond surrounded by an amino and a carboxyl group, each mounted in close proximity on a bicyclic scaffold. Fast amide hydrolysis of this model compound was found to depend on the presence of both the amino and carboxyl functions, and to involve a proton transfer in the rate-limiting step. Possible mechanisms for the hydrolytic cleavage and their relevance to peptide bond cleavage catalyzed by natural enzymes are discussed. Experimental observations suggest that the most probable mechanisms of the model compound hydrolysis might include a twisted amide intermediate and a rate-determining proton transfer.

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