H Mostafavi, K Adermann, S Austermann, M Raida, M Meyer, W G Forssmann
{"title":"Synthesis, purification and biological activity of (Ser10-phosphatidyl)-urodilatin (phosphourodilatin).","authors":"H Mostafavi, K Adermann, S Austermann, M Raida, M Meyer, W G Forssmann","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Based on the global phosphorylation approach, a selective synthesis of (Ser10-phosphatidyl)-urodilatin (phosphourodilatin), which contains 32 amino acid residues and a disulfide loop is described. The peptide was assembled stepwise on a polyethyleneglycol-polystyrene support using Fmoc-chemistry. The phosphorylation was performed on-resin by phosphitylation with a large excess of di-tert-butyl-N,N-diethylphosphoramidite within 1 hour, followed by oxidation with tert-butylhydroperoxide to the protected phosphopeptide. After cleavage and deprotection the disulfide bridge was introduced without side reactions by iodine titration of the mono-acetamidomethyl protected crude peptide. During the synthetic pathway, the acylation with side chain-unprotected Fmoc-serine and the phosphitylation satisfactorily yielded the expected intermediates. In some phosphorylation experiments a by-product having a reduced mass corresponding to the H-phosphonate was observed. Illustrated with the synthesis of phosphourodilatin, this type of by-product, which could not be separated by HPLC, and the difficult amino acid sequence make the synthesis of a large phosphopeptide a more delicate task than the synthesis of short phosphopeptides, which do not contain oxidation-sensitive amino acids, difficult sequences or additional structural elements such as disulfide loops. The biological activity of phosphourodilatin was compared with non-phosphorylated urodilatin in two assay systems. Both peptides revealed a vasorelaxant effect on aortic smooth muscle strips and induced a cGMP-generation in RFL-6 cells with increasing dose dependency.</p>","PeriodicalId":8980,"journal":{"name":"Biomedical peptides, proteins & nucleic acids : structure, synthesis & biological activity","volume":"1 5","pages":"255-60"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1995-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Biomedical peptides, proteins & nucleic acids : structure, synthesis & biological activity","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Based on the global phosphorylation approach, a selective synthesis of (Ser10-phosphatidyl)-urodilatin (phosphourodilatin), which contains 32 amino acid residues and a disulfide loop is described. The peptide was assembled stepwise on a polyethyleneglycol-polystyrene support using Fmoc-chemistry. The phosphorylation was performed on-resin by phosphitylation with a large excess of di-tert-butyl-N,N-diethylphosphoramidite within 1 hour, followed by oxidation with tert-butylhydroperoxide to the protected phosphopeptide. After cleavage and deprotection the disulfide bridge was introduced without side reactions by iodine titration of the mono-acetamidomethyl protected crude peptide. During the synthetic pathway, the acylation with side chain-unprotected Fmoc-serine and the phosphitylation satisfactorily yielded the expected intermediates. In some phosphorylation experiments a by-product having a reduced mass corresponding to the H-phosphonate was observed. Illustrated with the synthesis of phosphourodilatin, this type of by-product, which could not be separated by HPLC, and the difficult amino acid sequence make the synthesis of a large phosphopeptide a more delicate task than the synthesis of short phosphopeptides, which do not contain oxidation-sensitive amino acids, difficult sequences or additional structural elements such as disulfide loops. The biological activity of phosphourodilatin was compared with non-phosphorylated urodilatin in two assay systems. Both peptides revealed a vasorelaxant effect on aortic smooth muscle strips and induced a cGMP-generation in RFL-6 cells with increasing dose dependency.