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Synthetic turn mimetics and hairpin nucleators: Quo Vadimus?Dedicated to mark the 65th birth anniversary of Prof. P. Balaram

Structural mimicry of peptides has witnessed perceptible progress in the last three decades. Reverse turn and β-hairpin units are the smallest secondary structural motifs that are some of the most scrutinized functional cores of peptides and proteins. The practice of mimicking, without altering the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nair, Roshna V, Baravkar, Sachin B, Ingole, Tukaram S, Sanjayan, Gangadhar J
Format: Article
Language:English
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Structural mimicry of peptides has witnessed perceptible progress in the last three decades. Reverse turn and β-hairpin units are the smallest secondary structural motifs that are some of the most scrutinized functional cores of peptides and proteins. The practice of mimicking, without altering the function of the bioactive core, ranges from conformational locking of the basic skeleton to total replacement of structural architecture using synthetic analogues. Development of heterogeneous backbones - using unnatural residues in place of natural ones - has broadened further opportunities for efficient structural rigidification. This feature article endeavours to trail the path of progress achieved hitherto and envisage the possibilities that lie ahead in the development of synthetic turn mimetics and hairpin nucleators. This feature article endeavours to trail the path of progress achieved hitherto and envisage the enormous possibilities that lie ahead in the development of synthetic turn mimetics and hairpin nucleators.
ISSN:1359-7345
1364-548X
DOI:10.1039/c4cc03114h