Issue 3, 2020

Synthetic strategies to access staphylococcus auto-inducing peptides as quorum sensing modulators

Abstract

The accessory gene regulator (agr) quorum-sensing system is arguably the most important regulator of staphylococcus virulence and has been the focus of tremendous interest in the development of effective therapies for pathogenic bacterial infections. With regards to chemotherapeutic based strategies, the significant proportion of currently reported agr-system modulating molecules are mimics of the native ArgC substrate, which is a thioester-based macrocyclic peptide know as the auto-inducing peptide. Over the past two decades, more than two-hundred synthetic analogues have been reported. This review traces the development of the synthetic strategies employed to synthesise these analogues with a particular focus on macrocyclisation. At present these synthetic approaches can be clustered into five broad categories (1) solution-phase cyclisation, (2) immobilised carbodiimide assisted cyclisation, (3) concomitant on-resin cleavage and macrocyclisation, (4) Boc-compatible chemoselective thioesterification, and (5) Fmoc-compatible chemoselective thioesterification. The advantages and limitation provided by each of the approaches are compared and contrasted with a view towards potential reaction scale-up.

Graphical abstract: Synthetic strategies to access staphylococcus auto-inducing peptides as quorum sensing modulators

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
19 Sep 2019
Accepted
10 Dec 2019
First published
12 Dec 2019

Org. Biomol. Chem., 2020,18, 379-390

Synthetic strategies to access staphylococcus auto-inducing peptides as quorum sensing modulators

C. P. Gordon, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2020, 18, 379 DOI: 10.1039/C9OB02038A

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