Abstract
A brief survey of the history of peptide chemistry from Theodore Curtius to Emil Fischer to Bruce Merrifield is first presented. The discovery and development of peptide ligation, i.e. of actual chemical synthesis of proteins are described. In the main chapter, 'Synthesis of Proteins by Chemical Ligation' a detailed discussion of the principles, reactivities and mechanisms involved in the various coupling strategies now applied (ligation, chemical ligation, native chemical ligation) is given. These include coupling sites with cysteine and methionine (as well as the seleno analogs), histidine, glycine and pseudo-prolines, 'unrestricted' amino-acid residues (using the Staudinger reaction), as well as solid-phase segment coupling by thioligation of unprotected peptides. In another section, 'Synthesis of β-peptides by Thioligation', couplings involving β2- and β3- peptides are described (with experimental details). Copyright Blackwell Munksgaard, 2005.
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CITATION STYLE
Esko, K., Karlsson, S., & Porath, J. (1968). A Method for Determining Free Amino Groups in Polymers with Particular Reference to the Merrifield Synthesis. Acta Chemica Scandinavica, 22, 3342–3344. https://doi.org/10.3891/acta.chem.scand.22-3342
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