Abstract:
Peptides and proteins play vital roles in almost all biological and physiological
processes. Since they function as hormones, enzyme inhibitors or substrates, growth
promoters, or inhibitors and neurotransmitters, life without them would be
impossible. However, rapid degradation by proteases, poor oral availability, difficult
transportation through cell membranes, nonselective receptor binding, and
challenging multistep preparation are the major limitations of peptides. Hence,
peptidomimetics via modifications of amino acids and amide bonds have been
emerging to overcome the challenges present. The application of peptide chemistry
is of burgeoning interest to diverse areas such as catalysis, drug delivery,
development of sensors, and nanotechnology. Moreover, low molecular weight
synthetic peptides are considered to be effective catalysts for an increasingly wide
array of organic transformations. Also, short peptides comprising of urea moieties
are showing their prominence for the development of efficient catalytic systems.
Additionally, -NH units present in urea have proven as effective binding units for the
development of various types of sensors. Therefore, keeping in view the
fundamentals of peptidomimetic manipulations, herein, it is attempted to design and
synthesize peptidyl-urea analogs for catalysis and sensing applications. The
following chapters provide an overview of the current thesis and the content of each
chapter is briefly discussed as follows.
Chapter 1: Introduction
This chapter starts with a review of peptide chemistry, including the structural and
confirmational characteristics of the peptide bond. The current issues are then
reviewed in depth, along with the manner in which they can be addressed via
peptidomimetic manipulations such as amino acid and peptide bond modifications.
In addition, the applications of short peptides in the field of material sciences,
nanotechnology, biocatalysis and in supramolecular chemistry for the recognition of
essential biomolecules have been highlighted. Finally, the literature review
concludes with a discussion of the future work prospects.
Chapter 2: Cytochrome c-Urea Functionalized Dipeptide Conjugate: An
Efficient HBD Framework to Synthesize 4H-Pyrans via One-Pot
Multicomponent Reaction
Initially, protein-peptide conjugate (SS1-Cyt. c) is synthesized for the development
of an efficient and green protocol, to synthesize a series of 4H-pyran derivatives. The whole assembly is used as an efficient catalytic system by incorporating a
derivatized dipeptide molecule in the hydrophobic cavities of the protein
Cytochrome c (Cyt. c) that leads to the activation of hydrogen bond donating (HBD)
units of urea derivative of a dipeptide (SS1). The HBD units tend to show noncovalent
interactions with the reactant species responsible for triggering the organic
transformation to take place. The Eco-scale of 79 and E-factor of 0.089 is obtain on
the green chemistry scale, and therefore the procedure considers to be an ecofriendly
approach to produce 4H-pyran derivatives.Chapter 3: Urea-Functionalized Dipeptide Induced Allosteric Modulation for
Tyrosinase Promiscuity: An Efficient Catalytic Assembly for facile Synthesis of
Spiro-oxindoles
In this chapter, the design and synthesis of a urea functionalized dipeptide molecule
(SS2) is carried out which acts as an allosteric modulator and prompted the
enzymatic promiscuity behavior of the widely spread orthologous tyrosinase enzyme
(Tyr). The allosterically modified Tyr-SS2 hybrid is used as an efficient catalytic
assembly for the synthesis of various spiro-oxindoles derivatives. The high yield of
the products, i.e., up to 96 %, and with a less reaction time of 45 minutes are
achieved. Simple purification steps reduce the reported literature's limitations. The
Eco scale (80) and E-factors (0.096) calculations are in good agreement over the
green chemistry scale, proving the developed strategy's sustainability and
effectiveness.
Chapter 4: Backbone Extension via Peptidomimetics at N-terminal; Selfassembled
Nanofibrous Cluster and Application to Selective Progesterone
Detection in an Aqueous Medium
Despite the adequacy of the endogenous steroid (progesterone) levels in biological
functioning, elevated levels of progesterone hormone have several physiological
effects that are amplified due to its direct and indirect uptake from the environment,
food products, and medical therapy. Therefore, it is much needed to evaluate the
progesterone levels in environmental samples as well as for biological fluids. In this
work, author focused on the development of the nano sensing probe for the selective
detection of progesterone among the library of steroid hormones belonging to the
class of female sex hormones. Herein, backbone extension via peptidomimetics is
carried out at N-terminal to produce peptidyl-urea analog (SS3), and simultaneously, its self-assembly properties are explored. Moreover, to check the potency of the realtime
application of the developed nanoprobe, successfully determination of the
spiked concentration of progesterone levels in pharmaceutical and biological fluid
samples achieved with good percentage recovery.
Chapter 5: Solvent Directed Morphologies of Peptidic-Benzimidazolium
Dipodal Receptor; Ratiometric Detection and Catalytic Degradation of
Ochratoxin A
Ochratoxin A (OTA) is the most abundant and harmful toxin found in agriculture
and processed food. The environment and human health are both harmed by this
mycotoxin. As a result, in various scenarios, selective detection and biodegradation
of ochratoxin A are essential. The current study reveals the morphogenesis of a
peptidic-benzimidazole dipodal receptor (SS4) and its application as a catalytic and
sensing unit for the detection and degradation of OTA in an aqueous medium.
Initially, a facile and scalable method was executed to synthesize SS4, and solventdirected
morphologies were examined under SEM analysis. Consequently, molecular
recognition properties of the self-assembled architectures were explored using UVVisible
absorption, fluorescence spectroscopy, and atomic force microscopy (AFM).
The developed probe showed ratiometric response for OTA and served as a catalytic
unit for the degradation of OTA at a short interval of 25 min. The biodegradation
pathway for OTA was depicted using LC-MS analysis. Furthermore, the reliability
of the developed method ensured by determining the spiked concentrations of the
OTA in cereals and wine samples. The results obtained are in good agreement with
the % recovery and RSD values. The present work provides a robust, selective, and
sensitive method of detection and degradation of OTA.
Chapter 6: Conclusion
This chapter discusses the thesis's silent features as well as the overall conclusion.