3 resultados para Solid-phase Synthesis

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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My PhD research focused on the development of environmentally sustainable methods for peptide synthesis. The traditional and toxic solvents and bases used in solid-phase peptide synthesis (SPPS) were replaced with eco-friendly alternatives to reduce the environmental impact. In particular, N-octylpyrrolidone was found to be an effective green solvent in combination with dimethyl carbonate, resulting in a 63-66% reduction in process mass intensity (PMI). In addition, a green base, DEAPA, was identified for Fmoc removal, which showed comparable results to piperidine, while being less regulated and toxic, and able to better control aspartimide-related side reactions. The study extended beyond SPPS to explore liquid-phase peptide synthesis (LPPS) and solution-phase peptide synthesis (SolPPS) using propylphosphonic anhydride (T3P®) as a coupling reagent. The developed green SolPPS using Cbz amino acids achieved exceptional efficiency, minimal racemisation and a PMI of 30 to introduce a single amino acid in the iterative process. This PMI value is the lowest ever reported for an oligopeptide synthesis protocol. This technique was extended to N-Boc amino acids in DCM, requiring aqueous workups and achieving 95% purity of Leu-Enkephalin. Finally, T3P® was found to be suitable for LPPS. An anchor, mimicking a resin, was used to allow precipitation or solubilisation of the growing anchored-peptide, depending on the polarity of the solvent used. Anisole and DCM resulted in a pentapeptide purity of over 95%. While at Oxford University, I synthesized a cleavable fragment that is sensitive to cathepsin B (CatB) and incorporated it into a cyclic antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) targeting the metastasis-associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1 (MALAT1). ASO demonstrated good stability in a simulated in vivo environment using human serum and high affinity with complementary RNA. The Cyclic-ASO was opened by CatB in optimal conditions. Experiments highlight therapeutic potential and a novel method for controlling cyclic oligonucleotide activity, potentially enhancing cellular uptake.

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The aim of this thesis was the synthesis and photophysical characterization of some new polysulfurated aromatic compounds: this class of molecules can offer intriguing properties, potentially useful for the construction of new materials for optoelectronic devices. Two main families of compounds have been synthesized: the first is represented by a series of small molecular asterisks, with peripheral aromatic units, showing luminescence in solid phase or in highly rigid conditions. All compounds with peripheral substituents display an AIE behavior (Aggregation Induced Emission) with radiative deactivation of the triplet states. Taking inspiration from these smaller asterisks, a larger molecule with the same geometry has been designed, decorated with terpyridyl moieties as the outermost units: this compound shows great affinity for the coordination of several transition metal ions, changing luminescence properties after the interaction with zinc ions. With the same intentions, a tetrasulfurated pyrene-core molecule with terpyridyl external units has been synthesized and isolated: this ligand exhibits good coordination capabilities towards transition metal ions, giving rise to luminescent nanoaggregates upon addition of zinc(II), characterized by DLS and AFM microscopy. In addition a NIR emission is recorded after coordination of neodymium(III), showing evidence of an intramolecular energy transfer process.

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In the contest of a modern green chemistry approach, we firstly tried to substituent the classic peptide synthesis approach with the use of N-carboxyanhydrides in the presence of Hydroxyapatite, a high biocompatible inorganic base. Despite the great results, further developments are necessary for a daily use in laboratory and for our research, we decided to proceed with solid phase or liquid phase synthesis. In the first chapter, the treatment of pain with the use of opioids is introduced. The abuse and misuse of these kind of potent analgesics, led to the necessity of developing new drugs with less side effects. Starting from a previous study, where the introduction of a lactam-like structure in the place of the proline of Endomorphine1, switched the selectivity from MOR to KOR, we designed and synthetized three different libraries by placing a different trans inducer element to gain the desired selectivity and activity forcing the structure to adopt a linear rather than folded position. In the second chapter, we focused on lactate dehydrogenase, an enzyme overexpressed when the cells in hypoxia conditions, like in a tumour mass, need to produce energy through the transformation of pyruvate into lactate. We synthetized different cyclic peptidomimetics, designed to be inhibitors, as powerful tool to contrast cancer cells growing. Biological assays produced satisfactory preliminary results, but further studies are necessary for a definitive output. Finally in the last chapter, the cancer treatment problem is also approached through the design of nanoparticles, able to deliver drugs with efficacy and selectivity. We firstly synthetized silica core nanoparticles, built with toxic peptide sequences conjugated through click chemistry with Pluronic acid and then, in collaboration with Miriam Royo’s research group, we synthetized multivalent platforms for used drugs for the treatment of advanced colorectal cancer.