Abstract
The use of peptidomimetics has emerged as a powerful means for overcoming the limitations inherent in the physical characteristics of peptides thus improving their therapeutic potential. A peptidomimetic approach that has emerged in recent years with significant potential, is the use of β-amino acids. β-Amino acids are similar to α-amino acids in that they contain an amino terminus and a carboxyl terminus. However, in β-amino acids two carbon atoms separate these functional termini. β-amino acids, with a specific side chain, can exist as the R or S isomers at either the α (C2) carbon or the β (C3) carbon. This results in a total of 4 possible diastereoisomers for any given side chain. The flexibility to generate a vast range of stereo- and regioisomers, together with the possibility of disubstitution, significantly expands the structural diversity of β-amino acids thereby providing enormous scope for molecular design. The incorporation of β-amino acids has been successful in creating peptidomimetics that not only have potent biological activity, but are also resistant to proteolysis. This article reviews the rapidly expanding applications of β-amino acids in the design of bioactive peptide analogues ranging from receptor agonists and antagonists, MHC-binding peptides, antimicrobial peptides and peptidase inhibitors. Given their structural diversity taken together with the ease of synthesis and incorporation into peptide sequences using standard solid-phase peptide synthesis techniques, β-amino acids have the potential to form a new platform technology for peptidomimetic design and synthesis.
Keywords: amino acids, sandostatin, mhc-binding peptides, dna-binding peptides, bioactive foldamers