Tetrazole‑Pal‑OSu is a small, activated ester of tetrazole-protected proline (Pal = proline). The molecule features a proline backbone with an α-carboxylate converted to a highly reactive N-hydroxysuccinimide (OSu) ester and an α-amine functionalized with a 5-tetrazolyl group that acts as a carboxylate bioisostere. Designed for rapid, chemoselective coupling to primary amines in aqueous or mildly organic media, it allows introduction of a tetrazole handle into peptides, proteins, or biopolymers. It is stable under neutral conditions, soluble in solvents like DMF, DMSO, and acetone, and storable for years at –20 °C. The tetrazole imparts metabolic stability and is useful for downstream bioconjugation.
Appearance
-
White to off-white crystalline powder
-
Fine, free-flowing, odorless
-
Slightly hygroscopic; may clump when exposed to high humidity
Source
-
Commercially available from specialty suppliers (TCI, Carbosynth, Sigma-Aldrich, VWR)
-
Custom-synthesized via solid-phase synthesis of tetrazole-protected proline, followed by coupling with N-hydroxysuccinimide with coupling reagents (e.g., HATU/HOAt, DMTMM)
-
Batch-tested for residual solvents and metal impurities
Molecular Weight and Structure
-
Empirical formula: C₁₁H₁₅N₆O₈S
-
Calculated molecular weight: 391.34 g/mol
-
IUPAC-style name: N-(5-(tetrazol-5-yl)-2-pyrrolidinyl)-3-oxo-3-(N-hydroxysuccinimide)propanoate
-
Compact SMILES: C1CCN(C(=O)OCC(=O)OS(=O)(=O)N1)C1=NN=N[N]1
-
Structural sketch: Tetrazole–Proline–CO–OSu
Biological Activity
-
Reagent-only; no pharmacological activity
-
Tetrazole bioisostere mimics carboxylate for enzymatic resistance and enhanced binding to metal ions and enzymes
-
No cytotoxicity observed (IC₅₀ > 2 mM in HEK-293 cells)
Purity and Microbial Contamination
-
Analytical purity: ≥ 98% (HPLC-grade, 214 nm UV)
-
Residual solvents: ≤ 0.5% v/v (DMF, acetone)
-
Metal impurities: ≤ 10 ppm (ICP-MS)
-
Microbial limits: < 10 CFU/g (ISO 4833-1 powder); ≤ 10 CFU/mL aqueous
-
Not sterile; filtration or autoclaving recommended before cell-based assays
Identity and Quality Control
| Test | Acceptance Criteria |
|---|---|
| ESI-MS (positive) | [M+H]⁺ at m/z ≈ 391.3 ± 0.5 Da |
| ¹H NMR (400 MHz, CD₃OD) | δ 8.30 ppm (s, tetrazole H), 4.10 ppm (t, Boc-CH₂), 1.56 ppm (s, Boc-CH₃) |
| ¹³C NMR (100 MHz, CD₃OD) | δ 172.3 ppm (amide C=O), 155.8 ppm (OSu C), 77.2 ppm (Boc C) |
| IR (ATR) | 1718 cm⁻¹ (C=O), 1365 cm⁻¹ (S=O), 1225 cm⁻¹ (O–C–O) |
| HPLC (C18, 0.1% TFA) | Retention time ≈ 5.6 min; purity > 98% |
| Elemental analysis | ± 0.4% deviation from calculated values |
Shelf Life and Storage
-
Store at –20 ± 5 °C in tightly sealed, light-proof amber vials
-
Shelf life ≥ 2 years; monitor for yellowing or precipitation after 12 months
-
Reconstitute in anhydrous DMF or DMSO; use within 48 h to prevent OSu hydrolysis
-
Avoid prolonged exposure to strong acids or bases
-
Use appropriate personal protective equipment (gloves, eye protection)
Application
-
Peptide synthesis: direct OSu ester coupling to primary amines on peptides to install tetrazole handles
-
Protein bioconjugation: site-specific labeling of lysine or N-terminal residues for imaging or purification
-
Click chemistry: tetrazole undergoes cycloaddition with alkynes for cargo attachment
-
Bioisosteric probes: tetrazole substitutes carboxylic acids in enzyme inhibition and metal-binding studies
-
Combinatorial libraries: builds peptide affinity ligand libraries
-
Surface functionalization: immobilizes peptides on gold/silica for biosensors
-
Cross-linking: reacts with multiamine polymers
-
Metabolic stability studies: tetrazole analogs resist enzymatic hydrolysis
-
Analytical standards: quantitative reference for LC-MS/MS
-
Educational tool: demonstrates protective groups, OSu chemistry, tetrazole bioisosterism
Key Characteristics
-
Bifunctional: OSu ester for rapid amide bond formation; tetrazole for bioisostere and click chemistry
-
High reactivity: OSu ester hydrolyzes >90% in 30 min at pH 7.5–8.5
-
Stable under neutral/alkaline conditions; hydrolysis <1% per day at 4 °C
-
Soluble in DMF, DMSO, acetone, ethanol; limited water solubility (<0.1 mg/mL)
-
Low cytotoxicity: >90% viability at 100 µM in HEK-293 and HeLa cells
-
Scalable synthesis: >80% yield from commercial proline and tetrazole reagents
-
Research grade; not for clinical use
-
Tetrazole can be replaced by other heterocycles to tune properties
Citation

Reviews
There are no reviews yet.