Iron catalysts can modify amino acids, peptides to create new drug candidates

Monday, August 1, 2016 - 13:01 in Biology & Nature

For medicinal chemists, making tweaks to peptide structures is key to developing new drug candidates. Now, researchers have demonstrated that two iron-containing small-molecule catalysts can help turn certain types of amino acids—the building blocks of peptides and proteins—into an array of potential new forms, even when part of a larger peptide, while preserving a crucial aspect of their chemistry: chirality, or "handedness."

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