
Bachem highlights the importance of «click reactions» in peptide chemistry as a simple and versatile concept for peptide synthesis and chemoselective modification. The broad spectrum of applications of the reaction includes ligation, cyclization, bio-conjugation, and radiolabeling of peptides.
“Click Chemistry” is a term introduced by K.B. Sharpless, H.C. Kolb, and V. V. Fokin from the Scripps Research Institute at La Jolla to describe chemistry tailored to generate substances quickly and reliably by joining small units together similar to the modular strategy adopted by Nature. The term “click chemistry” applies to reactions that are highly efficient, wide in scope, and stereospecific. Product isolation is easy, the reactions are simple to perform using inexpensive reagents and can be conducted in benign solvents such as water. The Huisgen 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition is probably the most extensively studied click reaction. A variant of this reaction, the copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) independently developed by the groups of Sharpless at Scripps and Morten Meldal at Carlsberg Laboratory in Denmark fits the «click chemistry» concept well and is one of the most popular prototype click reactions to date.
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A click reaction must be modular, wide in scope, high yielding, create only inoffensive by-products (that can be removed without chromatography), be stereospecific, simple to perform and require benign or easily removable solvents.
Prof. K. Barry Sharpless
(Nobel laureate in 2001)
Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 40, 2004 (2001)
The popularity of the CuAAC is largely a result of the unique properties of both azides and the resulting triazoles. CuAAC involves the formation of a 1,2,3-triazole ring which is a rigid five-membered heterocycle. Such triazoles are isosteres of the peptide bond, mimicking the planarity of the amide moiety, but less prone to hydrolytic cleavage (Figure 1).
Most click reactions involve carbon-hetero atom bonding processes and have a high energy content which make the additions irreversible. Furthermore, azide moieties are easy to introduce, stable to water and oxidative conditions, orthogonal to many commonly used functional groups and vigorously reactive with others. For applications in vitro and in vivo, azides are virtually absent from any naturally occurring species (bio-orthogonal). The combination of the robustness of the triazole bond, the resemblance to an amide bond, and the potential biological properties it could endow make the triazole linkage not merely a benign, easily synthesized linker, but an integral part of the success of click chemistry.

Triazole linkage resembles an amide bond due to their relative planarity and strong dipole moments.
Click chemistry provides a number of avenues for peptide/protein modifications and could be combined with other techniques to make complex structures and multi-component functionalized systems with ease. The chemistry could be performed in different ways. For example, peptides can be converted post-synthetically to an azido derivative which can be clicked with appropriate substrate containing a clickable alkynyl group or vice versa. Peptides can also be made by inter- and intramolecular click reactions using azide or alkyne containing amino acids or building blocks during peptide synthesis. Building blocks containing clickable moieties will be instrumental for constructing sidechain modified peptides, interside-chain peptide chimera, peptide small molecule conjugates, and cyclic peptides. Solid phase resins modified with clickable groups can also be used for making clickable/modified peptides. Click chemistry is compatible with various protected amino acid side chains used in peptide synthesis.
A number of reagents and building blocks can be used for click chemistry. These include ω-azido-α-amino acids, PEG and spacer azides and alkynes, azide- or alkyne-modified fluorescent dyes and quenchers, nucleosides and nucleotides, alkyne or azide-containing chemical modification reagents, diazo transfer reagents, and propargyl derivatives of amino acids (e.g.O-propargylserine, glutamic acid bispropargyl amide).
The most important applications of click chemistry in peptide science include chemical ligation, cyclization and bio-conjugation (Figure 2). Other typical applications are conjugation of isotope labels for imaging, synthesis of peptidomimetics based on the triazole backbone, conformational and backbone modifications.

Linking two or more peptide fragments together to make a larger peptide chain is called ligation. Click chemistry can be conveniently utilized to make peptide–peptide linkages. A peptide fragment functionalized with an alkyne group could be ligated to another peptide with an N-terminal azide moiety resulting in a triazole linker (similar to an amide bond as explained earlier) holding two peptide units together.
Similarly multimeric peptides can be obtained by incorporating orthogonal side chain protecting groups such as ivDde or Aloc (for modifying the side chain of Lys) followed by selective deprotection, attachment of an alkyne function and clicking with N-terminal azide peptides. Numerous examples of peptide ligation have been published such as:
product 4066756) with the azide of a Plk1-PBR binding phosphorylated hexapeptide. The resulting triazole-containing oligopeptides were found to self-dimerize in a headto-tail fashion as the native peptides.
Modification of peptides by PEGylation has been achieved by click chemistry. For example, a lipopeptide was assembled by solid-phase synthesis followed by an onresin PEGylation reaction (using azido-PEG) and cleavage of the PEGylated peptide from the resin. There is a tremendous potential for click chemistry for various chemical modifications of peptides and proteins (e.g. attaching ligands, liphophilic or hydrophilic groups or linkers etc.).
A variety of macrocyclization methods are available to increase the clinical efficacy and bioavailability of peptides. The click reaction has been exploited in a number of different cyclization reactions such as the on-resin cyclization of a disulfide-containing peptide before or after removal of the side-chain protecting groups; the preparation of novel heterodetic cyclopeptides containing a triazole bridge by an intramolecular side chain-to-side chain click reaction; Cu(I)- and Ru(II)-mediated click cyclizations of tripeptides for generating vancomycininspired mimics; on-resin cyclization of peptide ligands of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor-1 etc.
Bioconjugation is the process by which synthetic molecules are attached to biological targets, or by which biomolecules are linked together. The impact of click chemistry on bioconjugation has been extensive in recent years. Arginine-rich TAT peptides modified with a clickable azido group can be conjugated to oligonucleotides, cytotoxic drugs, kinase inhibitors etc. to facilitate cell penetration for therapeutic purposes. The application of the CuAAC reaction provides a powerful chemical method to access mimetics of glycopeptides and glycoproteins (neoglycopeptides and neoglycoproteins) of well-defined homogeneous structure. Complex cyclopeptide-centered multivalent glycoclusters have been synthesized using the Cu-catalyzed click reaction. Selfassembling peptide fibers can incorporate multiple clickable peptides non-covalently, stoichiometrically and without disrupting their structure or stability. They can be conjugated to biotin followed by streptavidin-nanogold particles, or rhodamine, and visualized by electron and light microscopy. This approach allows the development of multi-component functionalized systems. The click reaction allows conjugating fluorescent molecules to peptides and proteins under mild conditions, a most important application in the emerging field of cell biology and functional proteomics.
Due to its relative planarity and large dipole moment, the 1, 2, 3-triazole function formed by click reaction bears a physicochemical resemblance to an amide bond. Consequently, the triazole linkage has found particularly broad use in the field of peptidomimetics. The triazole unit is resistant to enzymatic degradation, hydrolysis, and oxidation, making it an attractive moiety to replace more labile linkers in biologically active compounds. The click reaction has been utilized as a conjugation strategy in the design and synthesis of complex biomimetic architectures in which the triazole linkage replaces, and in some cases acts as a surrogate for peptide and phosphodiester bonds. Replacing a peptide bond with a triazole unit could result in interesting structures with unique conformational characteristics. Triazole units formed by the click reaction can act as helical components, a β-turn unit and a cis/trans-prolyl ratio modifier. Triazole units can also act as an effective replacement for a peptide portion in HIV-1 protease inhibitors. Modified peptides in which a triazole ring is introduced in the peptide backbone or attached to the side chain of a residue are good candidates to design new antimicrobial agents.
The CuAAC is an ideal ligation reaction for radiolabeling sensitive biomolecules. Alkyne or azide derivatives of radioisotopecontaining compounds could be used for labeling biomolecules such as folic acid, peptides, proteins, and glycopeptides. For example, an 11C isotope label was introduced via converting [11C]-CH3 I into [11C]-CH3 N3 by nucleophilic substitution and subsequently reacting the azide with an alkyne-modified peptide. 18F labeling for PET imaging was achieved by clicking azidomethyl-4-[18F]-fluorobenzene to a modified peptide. An important limitation of CuAAC should not be left unmentioned: Chelators as DOTA will form a complex with the catalyst, so conjugates with such compounds are more difficult to obtain.

Additionally, the cytotoxicity of copper remains a concern and a limiting factor for the widespread in vivo application of the CuAAC reaction.
Click peptides can also be labeled using Cu-free alternatives. Copper-free click chemistry is based on the reaction of strained cyclooctynes (such as BCN, DBCO) or electronically activated cyclooctynes containing electron-withdrawing substituents (MOFO, DIFO) with azides in the absence of Cu catalyst at low temperature. The SPAAC (strain-promoted alkyne-azide click chemistry) reaction developed by Carolyn Bertozzi’s group can be applied for in vivo chemoselective ligation to biomolecules in the same manner as the Staudinger ligation (reaction between a phosphine and an azide with release of nitrogen), but with the advantage of a much more rapid reaction. Recent applications of Cu-free click chemistry to peptides include the synthesis of a DOTA-peptide conjugate prepared by the attachment of DOTA to MOFO followed by conjugation to an azide-modified α-MSH peptide. The resulting conjugate can form chelates with radionuclides for imaging applications such as tumor targeting. As the cyclooctynes vary considerably in reactivity, multiple SPAAC is feasible.