- White, Tina R;
- Renzelman, Chad M;
- Rand, Arthur C;
- Rezai, Taha;
- McEwen, Cayla M;
- Gelev, Vladimir M;
- Turner, Rushia A;
- Linington, Roger G;
- Leung, Siegfried SF;
- Kalgutkar, Amit S;
- Bauman, Jonathan N;
- Zhang, Yizhong;
- Liras, Spiros;
- Price, David A;
- Mathiowetz, Alan M;
- Jacobson, Matthew P;
- Lokey, R Scott
Backbone N-methylation is common among peptide natural products and has a substantial impact on both the physical properties and the conformational states of cyclic peptides. However, the specific impact of N-methylation on passive membrane diffusion in cyclic peptides has not been investigated systematically. Here we report a method for the selective, on-resin N-methylation of cyclic peptides to generate compounds with drug-like membrane permeability and oral bioavailability. The selectivity and degree of N-methylation of the cyclic peptide was dependent on backbone stereochemistry, suggesting that conformation dictates the regiochemistry of the N-methylation reaction. The permeabilities of the N-methyl variants were corroborated by computational studies on a 1,024-member virtual library of N-methyl cyclic peptides. One of the most permeable compounds, a cyclic hexapeptide (molecular mass = 755 Da) with three N-methyl groups, showed an oral bioavailability of 28% in rat.