α-Methyl-DL-tryptophan methyl ester
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α-Methyl-DL-tryptophan methyl ester

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A tryptophan derivative as tachykinin antagonist.

Category
DL-Amino Acids
Catalog number
BAT-007504
CAS number
114524-80-0
Molecular Formula
C13H16N2O2
Molecular Weight
232.28
α-Methyl-DL-tryptophan methyl ester
IUPAC Name
methyl 2-amino-3-(1H-indol-3-yl)-2-methylpropanoate
Synonyms
H-DL-(Me)Trp-OMe; DL-α-METHYLTRYPTOPHAN METHYL ESTER HYDROCHLORIDE; methyl 2-amino-3-(1H-indol-3-yl)-2-methylpropanoate; H-alpha-Me-DL-Trp-OMe; ALPHA-METHYL-DL-TRYPTOPHAN METHYL ESTER; H-2-Me-DL-Try-OMe; Tryptophan, alpha-methyl-, methyl ester; alpha-Methyl-D,L-tryptophan Methyl Ester
Appearance
White crystalline solid
Purity
≥ 99% (TLC)
Density
1.213±0.06 g/cm3 (Predicted)
Melting Point
139-142 °C
Boiling Point
394.3±27.0 °C (Predicted)
Storage
Store at 2-8 °C
InChI
InChI=1S/C13H16N2O2/c1-13(14,12(16)17-2)7-9-8-15-11-6-4-3-5-10(9)11/h3-6,8,15H,7,14H2,1-2H3
InChI Key
RCUNGDZWHFRBBP-UHFFFAOYSA-N
Canonical SMILES
CC(CC1=CNC2=CC=CC=C21)(C(=O)OC)N
1.The structure of residues 7-16 of the A alpha-chain of human fibrinogen bound to bovine thrombin at 2.3-A resolution.
Martin PD1, Robertson W, Turk D, Huber R, Bode W, Edwards BF. J Biol Chem. 1992 Apr 15;267(11):7911-20.
The tetradecapeptide Ac-D-F-L-A-E-G-G-G-V-R-G-P-R-V-OMe, which mimics residues 7f-20f of the A alpha-chain of human fibrinogen, has been co-crystallized with bovine thrombin from ammonium sulfate solutions in space group P2(1) with unit cell dimensions of a = 83.0 A, b = 89.4 A, c = 99.3 A, and beta = 106.6 degrees. Three crystallographically independent complexes were located in the asymmetric unit by molecular replacement using the native bovine thrombin structure as a model. The standard crystallographic R-factor is 0.167 at 2.3-A resolution. Excellent electron density could be traced for the decapeptide, beginning with Asp-7f and ending with Arg-16f in the active site of thrombin; the remaining 4 residues, which have been cleaved from the tetradecapeptide at the Arg-16f/Gly-17f bond, are not seen. Residues 7f-11f at the NH2 terminus of the peptide form a single turn of alpha-helix that is connected by Gly-12f, which has a positive phi angle, to an extended chain containing residues 13f-16f.
2.Conversion of isoaspartyl peptides to normal peptides: implications for the cellular repair of damaged proteins.
McFadden PN, Clarke S. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1987 May;84(9):2595-9.
The hypothesis that cellular protein carboxyl-methylation reactions recognize altered aspartyl residues as part of a protein repair pathway has been tested in an in vitro system using tetragastrin (Trp-Met-Asp-Phe-NH2) as a model sequence. The L-isoaspartyl form of tetragastrin, where the phenylalanine residue is linked to the side-chain carboxyl group of the aspartate residue ([iso-Asp3]tetragastrin), is a substrate for the erythrocyte protein carboxyl methyltransferases, while the normal form is not. The enzymatically produced alpha-methyl ester of [iso-Asp3]tetragastrin, [iso-Asp(OMe)3]tetragastrin, is unstable at pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C and spontaneously demethylates with a half-time of 41 min to an intermediate L-succinimide form ([Asu3]tetragastrin) that, in turn, spontaneously hydrolyzes with a half time of 116 min to give a mixture of normal tetragastrin (20%) and [iso-Asp3]tetragastrin (80%). This sequence of enzymatic and nonenzymatic reactions can be coupled in a single reaction mixture; the [iso-Asp3]tetragastrin that is produced upon succinimide hydrolysis can reenter the reaction sequence by enzymatic methylation, and the net result of the process is the conversion of the isomerized peptide to the normal peptide.
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