aspartimide
Aspartimide is a cyclic imide, specifically a five-membered succinimide ring, that can form in peptides and proteins as an intermediate during the deamidation and isomerization of asparagine and aspartic acid residues. The formation involves intramolecular condensation between the side-chain carboxyl group of an aspartate residue and the backbone amide nitrogen of the following residue, yielding a cyclic imide that remains covalently linked to the peptide chain. The resulting aspartimide is reactive and can hydrolyze to two different products: the normal aspartate residue or isoaspartate, in which the peptide backbone is modified by the insertion of an extra methylene group, effectively creating a beta-linkage.
Aspartimide formation is influenced by factors such as pH, temperature, sequence context (for example, proximity of
Detection and significance: Deamidation and aspartimide formation are typically monitored by mass spectrometry and chromatographic techniques