4-Fluoroprolines: Conformational Analysis and Effects on the Stability and Folding of Peptides and Proteins

Top Heterocycl Chem. 2017:48:1-25. doi: 10.1007/7081_2015_196. Epub 2016 Jan 12.

Abstract

Proline is unique among proteinogenic amino acids because a pyrrolidine ring links its amino group to its side chain. This heterocycle constrains the conformations of the main chain and thus templates particular secondary structures. Proline residues undergo post-translational modification at the 4-position to yield 4-hydroxyproline, which is especially prevalent in collagen. Interest in characterizing the effects of this modification led to the use of 4-fluoroprolines to enhance inductive properties relative to the hydroxyl group of 4-hydroxyproline and to eliminate contributions from hydrogen bonding. The strong inductive effect of the fluoro group has three main consequences: enforcing a particular pucker upon the pyrrolidine ring, biasing the conformation of the preceding peptide bond, and accelerating cis/trans prolyl peptide bond isomerization. These subtle, yet reliable modulations make 4-fluoroproline-incorporation a complement to traditional genetic approaches for exploring structure-function relationships in peptides and proteins, as well as for endowing peptides and proteins with conformational stability.

Keywords: collagen; gauche effect; n→π* interaction; pyrrolidine; stereoelectronic effect.