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QBD10273

Sigma-Aldrich

Fmoc-N-amido-dPEG®8-acid

>95% (HPLC)

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Synonym(s):
Fmoc-N-amido-PEG8-COOH, Fmoc-N-amido-PEG8-acid, Fmoc-NH-PEG8-acid, Fmoc-PEG-acid
Empirical Formula (Hill Notation):
C34H49NO12
Molecular Weight:
663.75
MDL number:
UNSPSC Code:
12352106
NACRES:
NA.22

Assay

>95% (HPLC)

form

solid or viscous liquid

reaction suitability

reaction type: Pegylations

polymer architecture

shape: linear
functionality: heterobifunctional

shipped in

ambient

storage temp.

−20°C

Features and Benefits

Fmoc-N-amido-dPEG8-acid is a monodisperse PEG product that is useful for peptide synthesis. The 28-atom dPEG spacer allows the introduction of a medium-length, hydrophilic spacer onto either end of a peptide chain or between two peptide chains. The flexible dPEG spacer conjugates to peptides using conventional peptide synthesis chemistry. Peptide PEGylation imparts water solubility to hydrophobic peptide chains. Also, PEGylated peptides have expanded hydrodynamic volumes, which can reduce or eliminate renal clearance, and are protected from proteolysis. The combination of decreased renal clearance and protection from proteolysis contributes to longer in vivo circulation times for PEGylated (as compared to non-PEGylated) peptides. Additionally, PEGylation diminishes a peptide′s antigenicity. This product is part of the Fmoc-N-amido-dPEGn-acid (n=2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 12, 24, 36) product series.

Legal Information

Products Protected under U.S. Patent #s 7,888,536 & 8,637,711 and European Patent #s 1,594,440 & 2,750,681
dPEG is a registered trademark of Quanta BioDesign

WGK

WGK 3

Flash Point(F)

Not applicable

Flash Point(C)

Not applicable

Regulatory Information

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Guangchang Zhou et al.
Molecular bioSystems, 8(9), 2395-2404 (2012-07-10)
Robust methods for highly parallel, quantitative analysis of cellular protein tyrosine kinase activities may provide tools critically needed to decipher oncogenic signaling, discover new targeted drugs, diagnose cancer and monitor patients. Here, we describe proof-of-principle for a novel protein kinase
Ignacio Melgar-Asensio et al.
Investigative ophthalmology & visual science, 59(10), 4071-4081 (2018-08-12)
Drug delivery by intravitreal injection remains problematic, small agents and macromolecules both clearing rapidly. Typical carriers use microparticles (>2 μm), with size-related liabilities, to slow diffusion. We recently described cationic nanoparticles (NP) where conjugated Arg peptides prolonged residence in rat
Jared F Stefanick et al.
ACS nano, 7(9), 8115-8127 (2013-09-06)
Ligand-targeted nanoparticles are emerging drug delivery vehicles for cancer therapy. Here, we demonstrate that the cellular uptake of peptide-targeted liposomes and micelles can be significantly enhanced by increasing the hydrophilicity of the targeting peptide sequence while simultaneously optimizing the EG
Ian W Hamley
Biomacromolecules, 15(5), 1543-1559 (2014-04-12)
The remarkable diversity of the self-assembly behavior of PEG-peptides is reviewed, including self-assemblies formed by PEG-peptides with β-sheet and α-helical (coiled-coil) peptide sequences. The modes of self-assembly in solution and in the solid state are discussed. Additionally, applications in bionanotechnology

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