22 results on '"Ming Ho To"'
Search Results
2. Rational Design of Asymmetric Polymethines to Attain NIR(II) Bioimaging at >1100 nm
- Author
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Pan, Hsiu-Min, primary, Wu, Chi-Chi, additional, Lin, Chun-Yi, additional, Hsu, Chao-Shian, additional, Tsai, Yi-Chen, additional, Chowdhury, Partha, additional, Wang, Chih-Hsing, additional, Chang, Kai-Hsin, additional, Yang, Chieh-Hsuan, additional, Liu, Ming-Ho, additional, Chen, Yan-Chang, additional, Su, Shih-Po, additional, Lee, Yi-Jang, additional, Chiang, Huihua Kenny, additional, Chan, Yang-Hsiang, additional, and Chou, Pi-Tai, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Topochemical Deintercalation of Li from Layered LiNiB: toward 2D MBene
- Author
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Scott L. Carnahan, Kamila M. Wiaderek, Wenyu Huang, Gourab Bhaskar, Cai-Zhuang Wang, Maria Batuk, Kai-Ming Ho, Xun Wu, Yang Sun, Raquel A. Ribeiro, Julia V. Zaikina, Renhai Wang, Joke Hadermann, Paul C. Canfield, Chao Zhang, Volodymyr Gvozdetskyi, Aaron J. Rossini, and Sergey L. Bud'ko
- Subjects
Chemistry ,Pair distribution function ,chemistry.chemical_element ,General Chemistry ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Catalysis ,0104 chemical sciences ,Crystallography ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance ,Lithium ,Boron - Abstract
The pursuit of two-dimensional (2D) borides, MBenes, has proven to be challenging, not the least because of the lack of a suitable precursor prone to the deintercalation. Here, we studied room-temperature topochemical deintercalation of lithium from the layered polymorphs of the LiNiB compound with a considerable amount of Li stored in between [NiB] layers (33 at. % Li). Deintercalation of Li leads to novel metastable borides (Li similar to 0.5NiB) with unique crystal structures. Partial removal of Li is accomplished by exposing the parent phases to air, water, or dilute HCl under ambient conditions. Scanning transmission electron microscopy and solid-state Li-7 and B-1(1) NMR spectroscopy, combined with X-ray pair distribution function (PDF) analysis and DFT calculations, were utilized to elucidate the novel structures of (Li similar to 0.5NiB) and the mechanism of Li-deintercalation. We have shown that the deintercalation of Li proceeds via a "zip-lock" mechanism, leading to the condensation of single [NiB] layers into double or triple layers bound via covalent bonds, resulting in structural fragments with Li[NiB](2) and Li[NiB](3) compositions. The crystal structure of Li similar to 0.5NiB is best described as an intergrowth of the ordered single [NiB], double [NiB](2), or triple [NiB](3) layers alternating with single Li layers; this explains its structural complexity. The formation of double or triple [NiB] layers induces a change in the magnetic behavior from temperature-independent paramagnets in the parent LiNiB compounds to the spin-glassiness in the deintercalated Li similar to 0.5NiB counterparts. LiNiB compounds showcase the potential to access a plethora of unique materials, including 2D MBenes (NiB).
- Published
- 2021
4. Rational Design of Asymmetric Polymethines to Attain NIR(II) Bioimaging at >1100 nm.
- Author
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Pan, Hsiu-Min, Wu, Chi-Chi, Lin, Chun-Yi, Hsu, Chao-Shian, Tsai, Yi-Chen, Chowdhury, Partha, Wang, Chih-Hsing, Chang, Kai-Hsin, Yang, Chieh-Hsuan, Liu, Ming-Ho, Chen, Yan-Chang, Su, Shih-Po, Lee, Yi-Jang, Chiang, Huihua Kenny, Chan, Yang-Hsiang, and Chou, Pi-Tai
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A water-soluble ruthenium glycosylated porphyrin catalyst for carbenoid transfer reactions in bioconjugation reactions
- Author
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Chi-Ming Ho, Jun-Long Zhong, Cong-Ying Zhou, On-Yee Chan, Jessie Jing Yan, Fu-Yi Zhang, Jie-Sheng Huang, and Chi-Ming Che
- Subjects
Diazo compounds -- Chemical properties ,Glycosylation -- Analysis ,Organometallic compounds -- Structure ,Organometallic compounds -- Chemical properties ,Porphyrins -- Chemical properties ,Ruthenium -- Chemical properties ,Solvation -- Analysis ,Chemistry - Abstract
Water-soluble [[Ru.sup.II](4-Glc-TPP)(CO)] (4-Glc-TPP = meso-tetrakis(4-([beta]-D-glucosyl)phenyl)phorphyrinato dianion) is an active catalyst for the carbenoid transfer reactions in aqueous media with good selectivities and conversions. The ruthenium glycosylated porphyrin complex has selectively catalyzed the alkylation of the N-terminus of peptides and has mediated N-terminal modification of proteins by using a fluorescent-tethered diazo compound.
- Published
- 2010
6. Block copolymers with a twist
- Author
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Rong-Ming Ho, Yeo-Wan Chiang, Chun-Ku Chen, Hsin-Wei Wang, Hasegawa, Hirokazu, Akasaka, Satoshi, Thomas, Edwin L., Burger, Satoshi, and Hsiao, Benjamin S.
- Subjects
Chirality -- Analysis ,Hydrogen -- Atomic properties ,Hydrogen -- Chemical properties ,Phase transformations (Statistical physics) -- Analysis ,Chemistry - Abstract
Chiral block copolymers comprising chiral entities are designed to prepare helical architectures like twisted morphologies from self-assembly. Phase transitions from the H* phase to the stable cylinder and gyroid phases are found after long-time annealing, which has shown that the H* is a long-lived metastable phase.
- Published
- 2009
7. Helical nanocomposites from chiral block copolymer templates
- Author
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Wen-Hsien Tseng, Chun-Ku Chen, Yeo-Wan Chiang, Rong-Ming Ho, Akasaka, Satoshi, and Hasegawa, Hirokazu
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Chirality -- Analysis ,Polystyrene -- Chemical properties ,Polystyrene -- Structure ,Chemistry - Abstract
The feasibility of nanoreactor concept is shown via the templation of nanoporous PS from degradable chiral block copolymer (BCP*) poly(styrene)-b-poly(L-lactide) (PS-PLLA) for the fabrication of PS/Si[O.sub.2] helical nanocomposites and Si[O.sub.2] nanohelicals via sol-gel process. The inorganic nanohelices from the templation of porous nanostructures have provided a different dimension for the applications of the helical nanostructures at which well-defined hybridized nanocomposites with ordered texture is obtained.
- Published
- 2009
8. Transfer of Chirality from Molecule to Phase in Self-Assembled Chiral Block Copolymers
- Author
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Ming-Chia Li, Hirokazu Hasegawa, Edwin L. Thomas, Shih-Chieh Lin, Yu Der Lee, Rong-Ming Ho, and Hsiao Fang Wang
- Subjects
Circular dichroism ,Chemistry ,General Chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Micelle ,Catalysis ,Crystallography ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Bathochromic shift ,Vibrational circular dichroism ,Homochirality ,Chirality (chemistry) ,Perylene ,Cotton effect - Abstract
Here, we report the mechanisms of chiral transfer at various length scales in the self-assembly of enantiomeric chiral block copolymers (BCPs*). We show the evolution of homochirality from molecular chirality into phase chirality in the self-assembly of the BCPs*. The chirality of the molecule in the BCP* is identified from circular dichroism (CD) spectra, while the handedness of the helical conformation in the BCP* is determined from a split-type Cotton effect in vibrational circular dichroism spectra. Microphase separation of the BCP* is exploited to form a helical (H*) phase, and the handedness of helical nanostructure in the BCP* is directly visualized from transmission electron microscopy tomography. As examined by CD and fluorescence experiments, significant induced CD signals and a bathochromic shift of fluorescence emission for the achiral perylene moiety as a chemical junction of the BCPs* can be found while the concentration of the BCPs* in toluene solution is higher than the critical micelle concentration, suggesting a twisting and shifting mechanism initiating from the microphase-separated interface of the BCPs* leading to formation of the H* phase from self-assembly.
- Published
- 2012
9. Facile N...N coupling of manganese(V) imido species
- Author
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Shek-Man Yiu, Lam, William W.Y., Chi-Ming Ho, and Tai-Chu Lau
- Subjects
Nitrogen compounds -- Mechanical properties ,Nitrogen compounds -- Chemical properties ,Manganese -- Mechanical properties ,Manganese -- Chemical properties ,Chemistry - Abstract
(Salen)manganese (V) nitro species are activated by electrophiles such as trifluoroacetic anhydride (TFAA) or trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) to produce [N.sub.2]. Mechanistic studies suggest that the manganese(V) nitrido species first react with TFAA or TFA to produce an imido species, which then undergoes N...N coupling.
- Published
- 2007
10. Linear artificial molecular muscles
- Author
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Yi Liu, Magonov, Sergei, Baller, Marko, Flood, Amar H., Solares, Santiago D., Brough, Branden, Bonvallet, Paul A., Goddard, William A., Huang, Tony J., Vignon, Scott A., Chih-Ming Ho, Jeppesen, Jan O., Northrop, Brian H., Stoddart, J. Fraser, and Hsian-Rong Tseng
- Subjects
Chemical reactions -- Research ,Molecular dynamics -- Research ,Chemistry - Abstract
Two switchable, palindromically constituted bistable [3]rotaxanes is designed and synthesized with a pair of mechanically mobile rings encircling a single dumbbell. These designs are found to be reminiscent of a molecular muscle for the purposes of amplifying and harnessing molecular mechanical motions.
- Published
- 2005
11. Single-molecule tracing on a fluidic microchip for quantitative detection of low-abundance nucleic acids
- Author
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Tza-Huei Wang, Yahui Peng, Chunyang Zhang, Pak Kin Wong, and Chih-Ming Ho
- Subjects
Acid-base chemistry -- Research ,Fluorescence spectroscopy -- Usage ,Nucleic acids -- Research ,Chemistry - Abstract
A method capable of detection of low abundance DNA/RNA molecules was described by incorporating confocal fluorescence spectroscopy, molecular beacons, and a molecular-confinement microfluidic reactor. The transport of individual molecules to a minuscule laser-focused detection volume was investigated by using a combination of ac and dc fields through a trio of 3-D electrodes in the microreactor.
- Published
- 2005
12. Three-dimensionally packed nanohelical phase in chiral block copolymers
- Author
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Rong-Ming Ho, Chiang, Yeo-Wan, Tsai, Chi-Chun, Chu-Chien Lin, Bao-Tsan Ko, and Huang, Bor-Han
- Subjects
Organic compounds -- Analysis ,Polymers -- Analysis ,Polymers -- Structure ,Molecular structure -- Analysis ,Chemistry - Abstract
The chirality effect on self-assembling structures in the bulk is examined by using diblock copolymer system constituting both achiral and chiral blocks, poly(styrene)-beta-pol (L-lactide) (PS-PLLA). The chiral entity of constituted blocks, aside from solvent, amphiphilicity and electrostatics effects, play an important role in the formation of helical superstructures in solution.
- Published
- 2004
13. Modification of N-terminal α-amino groups of peptides and proteins using ketenes
- Author
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Chi-Ming Ho, Chi-Ming Che, Jie-Sheng Huang, Yun Chung Leung, Hiu-Chi Chong, Man-Kin Wong, and Anna On-Yee Chan
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Models, Molecular ,Molecular Structure ,Ketene ,Proteins ,Stereoisomerism ,General Chemistry ,Ethylenes ,Ketones ,Biochemistry ,Combinatorial chemistry ,Catalysis ,Amino acid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,chemistry ,Click chemistry ,Molecule ,Azide ,Lysozyme ,Selectivity ,Peptides - Abstract
A method of highly selective N-terminal modification of proteins as well as peptides by an isolated ketene was developed. Modification of a library of unprotected peptides XSKFR (X varies over 20 natural amino acids) by an alkyne-functionalized ketene (1) at room temperature at pH 6.3 resulted in excellent N-terminal selectivity (modified α-amino group/modified e-amino group = >99:1) for 13 out of the 20 peptides and moderate-to-high N-terminal selectivity (4:1 to 48:1) for 6 of the 7 remaining peptides. Using an alkyne-functionalized N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) ester (2) instead of 1, the modification of peptides XSKFR gave internal lysine-modified peptides for 5 out of the 20 peptides and moderate-to-low N-terminal selectivity (5:1 to 1:4) for 13 out of the 20 peptides. Proteins including insulin, lysozyme, RNaseA, and a therapeutic protein BCArg were selectively N-terminally modified at room temperature using ketene 1, in contrast to the formation of significant or major amounts of di-, tri-, or tetra-modified proteins in the modification by NHS ester 2. The 1-modified proteins were further functionalized by a dansyl azide compound through click chemistry without the need for prior treatment.
- Published
- 2012
14. Aptamer-based optical probes with separated molecular recognition and signal transduction modules
- Author
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Na Li and Chih-Ming Ho
- Subjects
Mathematical optimization -- Analysis ,Signals and signaling -- Methods ,Optics -- Research ,Chemistry - Abstract
A generic strategy is developed for converting the aptamer-target recognition event into an optical signal. This generic strategy of separating the recognition and signaling modules has simplified the probe optimization process.
- Published
- 2008
15. A water-soluble ruthenium glycosylated porphyrin catalyst for carbenoid transfer reactions in aqueous media with applications in bioconjugation reactions
- Author
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Chi-Ming Che, Jessie Jing Yan, Jun-Long Zhang, Jie-Sheng Huang, On-Yee Chan, Chi-Ming Ho, Fuyi Zhang, and Cong-Ying Zhou
- Subjects
Cyclopropanes ,Models, Molecular ,Allylic rearrangement ,Glycosylation ,Cyclopropanation ,Metalloporphyrins ,Nitrogen ,Protein Conformation ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Alkenes ,Biochemistry ,Medicinal chemistry ,Catalysis ,Ruthenium ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Organic chemistry ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Amines ,Carbenoid ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Binding Sites ,Alkene ,Proteins ,Water ,General Chemistry ,carbohydrates (lipids) ,chemistry ,Solubility ,Ylide ,Intramolecular force ,Diazo ,Cattle ,Sulfur ,Hydrogen - Abstract
Water-soluble [Ru(II)(4-Glc-TPP)(CO)] (1, 4-Glc-TPP = meso-tetrakis(4-(beta-D-glucosyl)phenyl)porphyrinato dianion) is an active catalyst for the following carbenoid transfer reactions in aqueous media with good selectivities and up to 100% conversions: intermolecular cyclopropanation of styrenes (up to 76% yield), intramolecular cyclopropanation of an allylic diazoacetate (68% yield), intramolecular ammonium/sulfonium ylide formation/[2,3]-sigmatroptic rearrangement reactions (up to 91% yield), and intermolecular carbenoid insertion into N-H bonds of primary arylamines (up to 83% yield). This ruthenium glycosylated porphyrin complex can selectively catalyze alkylation of the N-terminus of peptides (8 examples) and mediate N-terminal modification of proteins (four examples) using a fluorescent-tethered diazo compound (15). A fluorescent group was conjugated to ubiquitin via 1-catalyzed alkene cyclopropanation with 15 in aqueous solution in two steps: (1) incorporation of an alkenic group by the reaction of N-hydroxysuccinimide ester 19 with ubiquitin and (2) cyclopropanation of the alkene-tethered Lys(6) ubiquitin (23) with the fluorescent-labeled diazoacetate 15 in the presence of a catalytic amount of 1. The corresponding cyclopropanation product (24) was obtained with approximately 55% conversion based on MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. The products 23, 24, and the N-terminal modified peptides and proteins were characterized by LC-MS/MS and/or SDS-PAGE analyses.
- Published
- 2010
16. Oxidative amide synthesis and N-terminal [alpha]-amino group ligation of peptides in aqueous medium
- Author
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Wing-Kei Chan, Chi-Ming Ho, Man-Kin Wong, and Chi-Ming Che
- Subjects
Amides -- Chemical properties ,Amines -- Chemical properties ,Oxidizing agents -- Chemical properties ,Chemistry - Abstract
A new method for oxidative amide synthesis and peptide ligation is developed by using the '[Mn(2.6-[Cl.sub.2]TPP)Cl] + oxone/[H.sub.2][O.sub.2]' protocol. NaHC[O.cub.3] is used instead of N[H.sub.4]HC[O.sub.3] to investigate the amide synthesis reaction with amines.
- Published
- 2006
17. Block copolymers with a twist
- Author
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Benjamin S. Hsiao, Hirokazu Hasegawa, Christian Burger, Edwin L. Thomas, Yeo-Wan Chiang, Hsin-Wei Wang, Chun-Ku Chen, Rong-Ming Ho, and Satoshi Akasaka
- Subjects
Phase transition ,Annealing (metallurgy) ,Chemistry ,General Chemistry ,Flory–Huggins solution theory ,Biochemistry ,Catalysis ,Styrene ,Crystallography ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Electron tomography ,Copolymer ,Phase diagram ,Gyroid - Abstract
Chiral block copolymers (BCPs*) comprising chiral entities were designed to fabricate helical architectures (i.e., twisted morphologies) from self-assembly. A new helical phase (H*) with P622 symmetry was discovered in the self-assembly of poly(styrene)-b-poly(l-lactide) (PS-PLLA) BCPs*. Hexagonally packed, interdigitated PLLA helical microdomains in a PS matrix were directly visualized by electron tomography. The phase diagram of the PS-PLLA BCPs* was also established. Phase transitions from the H* phase to the stable cylinder and gyroid phases were found after long-time annealing, suggesting that the H* is a long-lived metastable phase. In contrast to racemic poly(styrene)-b-poly(d,l-lactide) BCPs, chiral interaction significantly enhances the incompatibility between achiral PS and chiral PLLA blocks in the PS-PLLA BCPs* and can be estimated through the determination of the interaction parameter.
- Published
- 2009
18. Single-molecule tracing on a fluidic microchip for quantitative detection of low-abundance nucleic acids
- Author
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Yahui Peng, Chih-Ming Ho, Pak Kin Wong, Chun-yang Zhang, and Tza-Huei Wang
- Subjects
Chemistry ,Microfluidics ,Analytical chemistry ,General Chemistry ,DNA ,Microfluidic Analytical Techniques ,Biochemistry ,Fluorescence ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Catalysis ,Fluorescence spectroscopy ,law.invention ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Molecular beacon ,Confocal microscopy ,law ,Nucleic acid ,Biophysics ,Fluorescence microscope ,Nucleic Acid Conformation ,RNA ,Molecular probe ,Oligonucleotide Probes - Abstract
Here, we report a method capable of quantitative detection of low-abundance DNA/RNA molecules by incorporating confocal fluorescence spectroscopy, molecular beacons, and a molecular-confinement microfluidic reactor. By using a combination of ac and dc fields via a trio of 3-D electrodes in the microreactor, we are able to precisely direct the transport of individual molecules to a minuscule laser-focused detection volume ( approximately 1 fL). A burst of fluorescence photons is detected whenever a molecular beacon-target hybrid flows through the detection region, and the amount of targets can be directly quantified according to the number of recorded single-molecule flow-through events. This assay consumes only attomoles of molecular probes and is able to quantitatively detect subpicomolar DNA targets. A measurement time of less than 2 min is sufficient to complete the detection.
- Published
- 2005
19. Three-Dimensionally Packed Nanohelical Phase in Chiral Block Copolymers
- Author
-
Bao-Tsan Ko, Bor-Han Huang, Chu-Chieh Lin, Yeo-Wan Chiang, Rong-Ming Ho, and Chi-Chun Tsai
- Subjects
Nanostructure ,Scanning electron microscope ,General Chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Catalysis ,Styrene ,National Synchrotron Light Source ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,chemistry ,Chemical engineering ,Transmission electron microscopy ,Lattice (order) ,Polymer chemistry ,Copolymer - Abstract
Chirality-driven microphase-separated morphology, poly(l-lactide) (PLLA) left-handed nanohelices hexagonally packed in PS matrix, was obtained from chiral diblock copolymers, poly(styrene)-b-poly(l-lactide). This is perhaps for the first time; the helical superstructures of chiral block copolymers were generated in the bulk and self-assembled to a two-dimensionally (2D) packed lattice. Now, the analyses of block copolymer thermodynamics should be complicated by the chiral entities of constituted components. Orderly packed nanohelical channels can be obtained after hydrolysis, and this provides new opportunities for block copolymer applications in the fields of nanosciences.
- Published
- 2004
20. Transfer of Chirality from Molecule to Phase in Self-Assembled Chiral Block Copolymers.
- Author
-
Rong-Ming Ho, Ming-Chia Li, Shih-Chieh Lin, Hsiao-Fang Wang, Yu-Der Lee, Hasegawa, Hirokazu, and Thomas, Edwin L.
- Subjects
- *
CHIRALITY , *BLOCK copolymers , *CHEMICAL synthesis , *MOLECULAR self-assembly , *CONFORMATIONAL analysis , *HELICAL structure , *CIRCULAR dichroism - Abstract
Here, we report the mechanisms of chiral transfer at various length scales in the self-assembly of enantiomeric chiral block copolymers (BCPs*). We show the evolution of homochirality from molecular chirality into phase chirality in the self-assembly of the BCPs*. The chirality of the molecule in the BCP* is identified from circular dichroism (CD) spectra, while the handedness of the helical conformation in the BCP* is determined from a split-type Cotton effect in vibrational circular dichroism spectra. Microphase separation of the BCP* is exploited to form a helical (H*) phase, and the handedness of helical nanostructure in the BCP* is directly visualized from transmission electron microscopy tomography. As examined by CD and fluorescence experiments, significant induced CD signals and a bathochromic shift of fluorescence emission for the achiral perylene moiety as a chemical junction of the BCPs* can be found while the concentration of the BCPs* in toluene solution is higher than the critical micelle concentration, suggesting a twisting and shifting mechanism initiating from the microphase-separated interface of the BCPs* leading to formation of the H* phase from self- assembly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Modification of N-Terminal α-Amino Groups of Peptides and Proteins Using Ketenes.
- Author
-
Anna On-Yee Chan, Chi-Ming Ho, Hiu-Chi Chong, Yun-Chung Leung, Jie-Sheng Huang, Man-Kin Wong, and Chi-Ming Che
- Subjects
- *
AMINO group , *PEPTIDES , *KETENES , *PROTEINS , *LYSINE , *ESTERS , *DANSYL compounds , *AZIDES - Abstract
A method of highly selective N-terminal modification of proteins as well as peptides by an isolated ketene was developed. Modification of a library of unprotected peptides XSKFR (X varies over 20 natural amino acids) by an alkyne-functionalized ketene (1) at room temperature at pH 6.3 resulted in excellent N-terminal selectivity (modified a-amino group/modified e-amino group = >99:1) for 13 out of the 20 peptides and moderate-to-high N-terminal selectivity (4:1 to 48:1) for 6 of the 7 remaining peptides. Using an alkyne-functionalized N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) ester (2) instead of 1, the modification of peptides XSKFR gave internal lysine-modified peptides for 5 out of the 20 peptides and moderate-to-low N-terminal selectivity (5:1 to 1:4) for 13 out of the 20 peptides. Proteins including insulin, lysozyme, RNaseA, and a therapeutic protein BCArg were selectively N-terminally modified at room temperature using ketene 1, in contrast to the formation of significant or major amounts of di-, tri-, or tetra-modified proteins in the modification by NHS ester 2. The 1-modified proteins were further functionalized by a dansyl azide compound through click chemistry without the need for prior treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Oxidative Amide Synthesis and N-Terminal α-Amino Group Ligation of Peptides in Aqueous Medium.
- Author
-
Wing-Kei Chan, Chi-Ming Ho, Man-Kin Wong, and Chi-Ming Che
- Subjects
- *
ORGANIC synthesis , *AMIDES , *PEPTIDES , *PORPHYRINS , *ALKENES , *SODIUM bicarbonate , *HYDROGEN peroxide , *WOLFF rearrangement - Abstract
The article discusses the new method for oxidative amide synthesis and peptide ligation by using a protocol involving oxone/hydrogen peroxide. The authors cited their recent report that manganese porphyrins are efficient catalysts for diastereoselective alkene epoxidations. In examining the amide synthesis reaction with amines, sodium hydrogen carbonate was used. Generation of PhCH=C=O from photo-Wolff rearrangement of PhC(O)CHN2 is also discussed.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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