|  | Amino Acids, Peptides and Proteins in Organic Chemistry Volume 3 - Building Blocks, Catalysis and Coupling Chemistry Amino Acids, Peptides and Proteins in Organic Chemistry (Volume 3) Edited by Hughes, Andrew B.
  1. Edition - December 2010 159.- Euro* 2010. XX, 584 Pages, Hardcover 391 Fig. (6 Colored Fig.), 11 Tab. - Handbook/Reference Book - ISBN-10: 3-527-32102-0 ISBN-13: 978-3-527-32102-5 - Wiley-VCH, Weinheim
* Series price on request at service@wiley-vch.de

Content
Sample Chapter
Short description Closing a gap in the literature, this practical book series in 6 volumes draws on the expertise of the "who's who" in amino acid research to provide a comprehensive discussion of the occurrence, uses and applications of amino acids, their polymeric forms, peptides and proteins.
From the contents PART I: Amino Acids as Building Blocks
AMINO ACID BIOSYNTHESIS Introduction Glutamate and Glutamine: Gateways to Amino Acid Bioynthesis Other Amino Acids from Ubiquitous Metabolites: Pyridoxal Phosphate-Dependent Routes to Aspartate, Alanine, and Glycine Routes to Functionalized Three-Carbon Amino Acids: Serine, Cysteine, and Selenocysteine Other Amino Acids fron Aspartate and Glutamate: Asparagine and Side Chain Functional Group Manipulation Aspartate and Glutamate Families of Amino Acids Biosynthesis of Aliphatic Amino Acids with Modified Carbon Skeletons: Branched-Chain Amino Acids, Lysine, and Pyrrolysine Biosynthesis of the Aromatic Amino Acids Conclusions
HETEROCYCLES FROM AMINO ACIDS Introduction Heterocycles Generated by Intramolecular Cyclizations Heterocycles Generated by Intermolecular Cyclizations Heterocycles Generated by Cycloadditions Conclusions Experimental Procedures
RADICAL-MEDIATED SYNTHESIS OF ALPHA-AMINO ACIDS AND PEPTIDES Introduction Free Radical Reactions Radical Addition to Imine Derivatives Radical Conjugate Addition Conclusions Experimental Protocols
SYNTHESIS OF BETA-LACTAMS (CEPHALOSPORINS) BY BIOCONVERSION Introduction Biosynthetic Pathways of Cephalosporins and Penicillins Production of 7-ACA by A. chrysogenum Production of 7-ADCA by A. chrysogenum Production of Penicillin G by A. chrysogenum Production of Cephalosporins by P. chrysogenum Conversion of Penicillin G and other Penicillins to DAOG by Streptomyces clavuligerus Conclusions
STRUCTURE AND REACTIVITY OF BETA-LACTAMS Introduction Structure Reactivity Hydrolysis Aminolysis Epimerization
PART II: Amino Acid Coupling Chemistry
SOLUTION-PHASE PEPTIDE SYNTHESIS Principle of Peptide Synthesis Protection Procedures Chain Elongation Procedures Final Deprotection Methods
SOLID-PHASE PEPTIDE SYNTHESIS: HISTORICAL ASPECTS Introduction Selection of Compatible Synthetic Components Racemization and Stepwise Peptide Assembly Optimization of Synthetic Components Foreshadowing of the Nobel Prize Automation of SPPS Impact of New Protecting Groups and Resin Linkages Solid-Phase Organic Chemistry Early Applications of SPPS to Small Proteins Side-Reactions and Sequence-Dependent Problems Rapid Expansion of Usage Leading to the Nobel Prize From the Nobel Prize Forward to Combinatorial Chemistry Protein Synthesis and Peptide Ligation Conclusions
LINKERS FOR SOLID-PHASE PEPTIDE SYNTHESIS Introduction Immobilization via Carboxyl Group Imobilization via Amino Group Backbone Immobilization Immobilization via Amino Acid Side-Chain Conclusions
ORTHOGONAL PROTECTING GROUPS AND SIDE-REACTIONS IN Fmoc/tBu SOLID-PHASE PEPTIDE SYNTHESIS Orthogonal Protecting Groups in Fmoc/tBu Solid-Phase Peptide Synthesis Side-Reactions in Fmoc/tBu Solid-Phase Peptide Synthesis
Fmoc METHODOLOGY: CLEAVAGE FROM THE RESIN AND FINAL DEPROTECTION Introduction "Low" TFA-Labile Resins "High" TFA-Labile Resins Final Remarks
STRATEGY IN SOLID-PHASE PEPTIDE SYNTHESIS Synthetic Strategies Utilizing Solid-Phase Peptide Synthesis Methods Solid Support: Resins and Linkers Developing the Synthetic Strategy: Selection of the Protecting Group Scheme Resin Loading SBS Peptide Chain Elongation: Coupling and Activation Piperazine Formation Solid-Phase Synthesis of Protected Peptide Segments Fragment Condensation Approach: Convergent and Hybrid Synteses Cleavage from the Resin and Global Peptide Deprotection Disulfide Bond-Containing Peptides Native Chemical Ligation (NCL) SPPS of Peptides Modified at their C-Terminus Side-Chain-Modified Peptides Cyclic Peptides Large-Scale Solid-Phase Synthesis Conclusions
PEPTIDE-COUPLING REAGENTS Introduction Carbodiimides Phosphonium Salts Aminium/Uronium Salts Fluoroformamidinium Coupling Reagents Organophosphorus Reagents Triazine Coupling Reagents Mukaiyama's Reagent Conclusions
CHEMOSELECTIVE PEPTIDE LIGATION: A PRIVILEGED TOOL FOR PROTEIN SYNTHESIS Introduction Chemoselective Peptide Ligations Following a Capture/Rearrangement Strategy Chemical Transformations for Cys-Free Ligations in Peptides and Proteins Other Chemoselective Capture Strategies Peptide Ligations by Chemoselective Amide-Bond-Forming Reactions Strategies for the Ligation of Multiple Fragments
AUTOMATION OF PEPTIDE SYNTHESIS Introduction SPPS: From Mechanization to Automation Deprotection Step: Monitoring and Control Coupling Step: Monitoring and Control Integrated Deprotection and Coupling Control
PEPTIDE PURIFICATION BY REVERSED-PHASE CHROMATOGRAPHY RP-HPLC of Peptides Peptide Properties Chromatographic Principles Prediction of Peptide Retention Times Advantages of Reduced Scale Two-Dimensional Chromatographic Methods Peptide Analysis in Complex Biological Matrices Standard Methods for Peptide Separations for Analysis by Hyphenated Techniques Emerging Methods for Peptide Separations for Analysis by Hyphenated Techniques Practical Use of RP-HPLC for Purifying Peptides (Analytical and Preparative Scale)
DIFFICULT PEPTIDES Importance of Peptide Synthesis Methods for Peptide Synthesis Chemical Peptide Synthesis "Difficult Peptide Sequences" Means to Overcome Peptide Aggregation in SPPS Monitoring the Synthesis of a "Difficult Peptide" Conclusions
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