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1.
Salmon calcitonin (sCT) was selected as a model protein drug for investigating its intrinsic thermal stability and conformational structure in the solid and liquid states by using a Fourier transform infrared (FT‐IR) microspectroscopy with or without utilizing thermal analyzer. The spectral correlation coefficient (r) analysis between two second‐derivative IR spectra was applied to quantitatively estimate the structural similarity of sCT in the solid state before and after different treatments. The thermal FT‐IR microspectroscopic data clearly evidenced that sCT in the solid state was not effected by temperature and had a thermal reversible property during heating–cooling process. Moreover, the high r value of 0.973 or 0.988 also evidenced the structural similarity of solid‐state sCT samples before and after treatments. However, sCT in H2O exhibited protein instability and thermal irreversibility after incubation at 40°C. The temperature‐induced conformational changes of sCT in H2O was occurred to transform the α‐helix/random coil structures to β‐sheet structure and also resulted in the formation of intramolecular and intermolecular β‐sheet structures. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 93: 200–207, 2010. This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The “Published Online” date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com  相似文献   

2.
Glucose‐dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (gastric inhibitory polypeptide, or GIP), a 42‐amino acid incretin hormone, modulates insulin secretion in a glucose‐concentration‐dependent manner. Its insulinotropic action is highly dependent on glucose concentration that surmounts the hypoglycemia side effects associated with current therapy. In order to develop a GIP‐based anti‐diabetic therapy, it is essential to establish the 3D structure of the peptide and study its interaction with the GIP receptor (GIPR) in detail. This will give an insight into the GIP‐mediated insulin release process. In this article, we report the solution structure of GIP(1–42, human)NH2 deduced by NMR and the interaction of the peptide with the N‐terminus of GIPR using molecular modelling methods. The structure of GIP(1–42, human)NH2 in H2O has been investigated using 2D‐NMR (DQF‐COSY, TOCSY, NOESY, 1H‐13C HSQC) experiments, and its conformation was built by constrained MD simulations with the NMR data as constraints. The peptide in H2O exhibits an α‐helical structure between residues Ser8 and Asn39 with some discontinuity at residues Gln29 to Asp35; the helix is bent at Gln29. This bent gives the peptide an ‘L’ shape that becomes more pronounced upon binding to the receptor. The interaction of GIP with the N‐terminus of GIPR was modelled by allowing GIP to interact with the N‐terminus of GIPR under a series of decreasing constraints in a molecular dynamics simulation, culminating with energy minimization without application of any constraints on the system. The canonical ensemble obtained from the simulation was subjected to a detailed energy analysis to identify the peptide–protein interaction patterns at the individual residue level. These interaction energies shed some light on the binding of GIP with the GIPR N‐terminus in a quantitative manner. Copyright © 2010 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

3.
Prion diseases are associated with the misfolding of the prion protein (PrPC) from a largely α‐helical isoform to a β‐sheet rich oligomer (PrPSc). Flexibility of the polypeptide could contribute to the ability of PrPC to undergo the conformational rearrangement during PrPC–PrPSc interactions, which then leads to the misfolded isoform. We have therefore examined the molecular motions of mouse PrPC, residues 113–231, in solution, using 15N NMR relaxation measurements. A truncated fragment has been used to eliminate the effect of the 90‐residue unstructured tail of PrPC so the dynamics of the structured domain can be studied in isolation. 15N longitudinal (T1) and transverse relaxation (T2) times as well as the proton‐nitrogen nuclear Overhauser effects have been used to calculate the spectral density at three frequencies, 0, ωN, and 0.87ωH. Spectral densities at each residue indicate various time‐scale motions of the main‐chain. Even within the structured domain of PrPC, a diverse range of motions are observed. We find that removal of the tail increases T2 relaxation times significantly indicating that the tail is responsible for shortening of T2 times in full‐length PrPC. The truncated fragment of PrP has facilitated the determination of meaningful order parameters (S2) from the relaxation data and shows for the first time that all three helices in PrPC have similar rigidity. Slow conformational fluctuations of mouse PrPC are localized to a distinct region that involves residues 171 and 172. Interestingly, residues 170–175 have been identified as a segment within PrP that will form a steric zipper, believed to be the fundamental amyloid unit. The flexibility within these residues could facilitate the PrPC–PrPSc recognition process during fibril elongation.  相似文献   

4.
Short range side chain‐backbone hydrogen bonded motifs involving Asn and Gln residues have been identified from a data set of 1370 protein crystal structures (resolution ≤ 1.5 Å). Hydrogen bonds involving residues i ? 5 to i + 5 have been considered. Out of 12,901 Asn residues, 3403 residues (26.4%) participate in such interactions, while out of 10,934 Gln residues, 1780 Gln residues (16.3%) are involved in these motifs. Hydrogen bonded ring sizes (Cn, where n is the number of atoms involved), directionality and internal torsion angles are used to classify motifs. The occurrence of the various motifs in the contexts of protein structure is illustrated. Distinct differences are established between the nature of motifs formed by Asn and Gln residues. For Asn, the most highly populated motifs are the C10 (COδi …NHi + 2), C13 (COδi …NHi + 3) and C17 (NδHi …COi ? 4) structures. In contrast, Gln predominantly forms C16 (COεi …NHi ? 3), C12 (NεHi …COi ? 2), C15 (NεHi …COi ? 3) and C18 (NεHi …COi ? 4) motifs, with only the C18motif being analogous to the Asn C17structure. Specific conformational types are established for the Asn containing motifs, which mimic backbone β‐turns and α‐turns. Histidine residues are shown to serve as a mimic for Asn residues in side chain‐backbone hydrogen bonded ring motifs. Illustrative examples from protein structures are considered. Proteins 2012; © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and pituitary adenylate cyclase‐activating polypeptide‐27 (PACAP27) are members of the secretin‐glucagon family containing 28 and 27 residues, respectively. NMR spectroscopy studies suggest that the N‐terminus exhibit consecutive β‐turns whereas the central and C‐terminal parts of the VIP molecule have been characterized as being two α‐helices. In contrast, similar studies carried out on PACAP suggest that the shortest active peptide segment PACAP27 in the presence of trifluoroethanol (TFE) exhibits a disordered N‐terminal domain followed by a α‐helix expanding residues 9–26 with a discontinuity between residues 20 and 21. In the present study, a series of MD trajectories of VIP and PACAP27 were carried out using two different implicit models of the solvent: the Generalized Born that use an effective Born radii described by Onufriev, Bashford, and Case (GBOBC) and the Hawkins, Cramer, and Truhlar approximation (GBHCT) and two different force fields: AMBER ff99 and a modified version of the latter described by Sorin and Pande (Biophys J 2005, 88, 2472‐2493), ff99SP. Comparison of the structures obtained from the MD trajectories and those derived from the NMR studies in the literature indicates that the GBOBC method is more efficient in the exploration of the conformational space and presents a higher agreement with the experimental structure of VIP and PACAP27 in TFE. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 91: 391–400, 2009. This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The “Published Online” date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com  相似文献   

6.
The synthetic peptide fragment (LC5: LRCRNEKKRHRAVRLIFTI) inhibits human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV‐1) infection of MT‐4 cells. In this study, the solution structure of LC5 in SDS micelles was elucidated by using the standard 1H two‐dimensional NMR spectroscopic method along with circular dichroism and fluorescence quenching. The peptide adopts a helical structure in the C‐terminal region (residues 13–16), whereas the N‐terminal part remains unstructured. The importance of Phe17 in maintaining the structure of LC5 was demonstrated by replacing Phe17 with Ala, which resulted in the dramatic conformational change of LC5. The solution structure of LC5 elucidated in the present work provides a basis for further study of the mechanism of the inhibition of HIV‐1 infection. Copyright © 2010 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

7.
Nucleic acid recognition is often mediated by α‐helices or disordered regions that fold into α‐helix on binding. A peptide bearing the DNA recognition helix of HPV16 E2 displays type II polyproline (PII) structure as judged by pH, temperature, and solvent effects on the CD spectra. NMR experiments indicate that the canonical α‐helix is stabilized at the N‐terminus, while the PII forms at the C‐terminus half of the peptide. Re‐examination of the dihedral angles of the DNA binding helix in the crystal structure and analysis of the NMR chemical shift indexes confirm that the N‐terminus half is a canonical α‐helix, while the C‐terminal half adopts a 310 helix structure. These regions precisely match two locally driven folding nucleii, which partake in the native hydrophobic core and modulate a conformational switch in the DNA binding helix. The peptide shows only weak and unspecific residual DNA binding, 104‐fold lower affinity, and 500‐fold lower discrimination capacity compared with the domain. Thus, the precise side chain conformation required for modulated and tight physiological binding by HPV E2 is largely determined by the noncanonical strained α‐helix conformation, “presented” by this unique architecture. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 91: 432–443, 2009. This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The “Published Online” date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com  相似文献   

8.
The amino acid Aib predisposes a peptide to be helical with context‐dependent preference for either 310‐ or α‐ or a mixed helical conformation. Short peptides also show an inherent tendency to be unfolded. To characterize helical and unfolded states adopted by water‐soluble Aib‐containing peptides, the conformational preference of Ac‐Ala‐Aib‐Ala‐Lys‐Ala‐Aib‐Lys‐Ala‐Lys‐Ala‐Aib‐Tyr‐NH2 was determined by CD, NMR and MD simulations as a function of temperature. Temperature‐dependent CD data indicated the contribution of two major components, each an admixture of helical and extended/polyproline II structures. Both right‐ and left‐handed helical conformations were detected from deconvolution of CD data and 13C NMR experiments. The presence of a helical backbone, more pronounced at the N‐terminal, and a temperature‐induced shift in α‐helix/310‐helix equilibrium, more pronounced at the C‐terminal, emerged from NMR data. Starting from polyproline II, the N‐terminal of the peptide folded into a helical backbone in MD simulations within 5 ns at 60°C. Longer simulations showed a mixed‐helical backbone to be stable over the entire peptide at 5°C while at 60°C the mixed‐helix was either stable at the N‐terminus or occurred in short stretches through out the peptide, along with a significant population of polyproline II. Our results point towards conformational heterogeneity of water‐soluble Aib‐based peptide helices and the associated subtleties. The problem of analyzing CD and NMR data of both left‐ and right‐handed helices are discussed, especially the validity of the ellipticity ratio [θ]222/[θ]207, as a reporter of α‐/310‐ population ratio, in right‐ and left‐handed helical mixtures. Proteins 2009. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
On consideration that intrinsic structural weakness could affect the segment spanning the α2‐helical residues 173–195 of the PrP, we have investigated the conformational stabilities of some synthetic Ala‐scanned analogs of the peptide derived from the 180–195 C‐terminal sequence, using a novel approach whose theoretical basis originates from protein thermodynamics. Even though a quantitative comparison among peptides could not be assessed to rank them according to the effect caused by single amino acid substitution, as a general trend, all peptides invariably showed an appreciable preference for an α‐type organization, consistently with the fact that the wild‐type sequence is organized as an α‐helix in the native protein. Moreover, the substitution of whatever single amino acid in the wild‐type sequence reduced the gap between the α‐ and the β‐propensity, invariably enhancing the latter, but in any case this gap was larger than that evaluated for the full‐length α2‐helix‐derived peptide. It appears that the low β‐conformation propensity of the 180–195 region depends on the simultaneous presence of all of the Ala‐scanned residues, indirectly confirming that the N‐terminal 173–179 segment could play a major role in determining the chameleon conformational behavior of the entire 173–195 region in the PrP. Copyright © 2008 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

10.
The first solution state structural analysis (NMR) of the C‐terminal sequence of human GL that binds to glycogen phosphorylase a (GPa), PEWPSYLGYEKLGPYY‐NH2 ( 1 ), showed it to be in a random coil conformation. This was supported by molecular dynamics simulation (modelled in solution) using NAMD 2.6. The conformational ambiguity of the peptide makes the structural arrangement of the peptide (and internal residues) strongly dependent on the environment. Thirteen tetra‐peptide fragments of the C‐terminal sequence, YEKLG‐NH2, and the corresponding tri‐ and di‐peptide sequences were used in a fragment screen against GPa. Compound 2 (H‐GPYY‐NH2) did not give an IC50 value, whereas PEWPSYLGYEKLGPYY‐NH2 ( 1 ) displayed an IC50 of 34 µM against GPa. Truncated peptides derived from 1 , (EKL‐NH2, EKLG‐NH2, and AcEKNH2) inhibited GPa (21%, 32%, 63%, respectively at 22 mM ). These studies suggest key residues within the peptide chain have additional molecular interactions with GPa. The interaction of intra‐sequence residues in combination with the terminal residues of PEWPSYLGYEKLGPYY with GPa may form the basis for the design of new inhibitors of GPa. Copyright © 2009 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

11.
Norovirus protease is an essential enzyme for proteolytic maturation of norovirus nonstructural proteins and has been implicated as a potential target for antiviral drug development. Although X‐ray structural studies of the protease give us wealth of structural information including interactions of the protease with its substrate and dimeric overall structure, the role of protein dynamics in the substrate recognition and the biological relevance of the protease dimer remain unclear. Here we determined the solution NMR structure of the 3C‐like protease from Norwalk virus (NV 3CLpro), a prototype strain of norovirus, and analyzed its backbone dynamics and hydrodynamic behavior in solution. 15N spin relaxation and analytical ultracentrifugation analyses demonstrate that NV 3CLpro is predominantly a monomer in solution. Solution structure of NV 3CLpro shows significant structural variation in C‐terminal domain compared with crystal structures and among lower energy structure ensembles. Also, 15N spin relaxation and Carr–Purcell–Meiboom–Gill (CPMG)‐based relaxation dispersion analyses reveal the dynamic properties of residues in the C‐terminal domain over a wide range of timescales. In particular, the long loop spanning residues T123–G133 show fast motion (ps‐ns), and the residues in the bII–cII region forming the large hydrophobic pocket (S2 site) undergo conformational exchanges on slower timescales (μs–ms), suggesting their important role in substrate recognition.  相似文献   

12.
β‐Amino acids containing hybrid peptides and β‐peptides show great potential as peptidomimetics. In this paper we describe the synthesis and affinity toward the µ‐ and δ‐opioid receptors of β‐peptides, analogues of Leu‐enkephalin, deltorphin I, dermorphin and α,β‐hybrides, analogues of deltorphin I. Substitution of α‐amino acid residues with β3homo‐amino acid residues, in general resulted in decrease of affinity to opioid receptors. However, the incorporation β3h‐D ‐Ala in position 2 or β3hPhe in position 3 of deltorphin I resulted in potent and selective ligand for δ‐opioid receptor. The NMR studies of β‐deltorphin I analogue suggest that conformational motions in the central part of the peptide backbone are partially restricted and some conformational preferences can be expected. Copyright © 2009 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

13.
One chiral L ‐valine (L ‐Val) was inserted into the C‐terminal position of achiral peptide segments constructed from α‐aminoisobutyric acid (Aib) and α,β‐dehydrophenylalanine (ΔZPhe) residues. The IR, 1H NMR and CD spectra indicated that the dominant conformations of the pentapeptide Boc‐Aib‐ΔPhe‐(Aib)2‐L ‐Val‐NH‐Bn (3) and the hexapeptide Boc‐Aib‐ΔPhe‐(Aib)3‐L ‐Val‐NH‐Bn (4) in solution were both right‐handed (P) 310‐helical structures. X‐ray crystallographic analyses of 3 and 4 revealed that only a right‐handed (P) 310‐helical structure was present in their crystalline states. The conformation of 4 was also studied by molecular‐mechanics calculations. Copyright © 2010 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

14.
Proton binding equilibria (pKa values) of ionizable groups in proteins are exquisitely sensitive to their microenvironments. Apparent pKa values measured for individual ionizable residues with NMR spectroscopy are actually population‐weighted averages of the pKa in different conformational microstates. NMR spectroscopy experiments with staphylococcal nuclease were used to test the hypothesis that pKa values of surface Glu and Asp residues are affected by pH‐sensitive fluctuations of the backbone between folded and locally unfolded conformations. 15N spin relaxation studies showed that as the pH decreases from the neutral into the acidic range the amplitudes of backbone fluctuations in the ps‐ns timescale increase near carboxylic residues. Hydrogen exchange experiments suggested that backbone conformational fluctuations promoted by decreasing pH also reflect slower local or sub‐global unfolding near carboxylic groups. This study has implications for structure‐based pKa calculations: (1) The timescale of the backbone's response to ionization events in proteins can range from ps to ms, and even longer; (2) pH‐sensitive fluctuations of the backbone can be localized to both the segment the ionizable residue is attached to or the one that occludes the ionizable group; (3) Structural perturbations are not necessarily propagated through Coulomb interactions; instead, local fluctuations appear to be coupled through the co‐operativity inherent to elements of secondary structure and to networks of hydrogen bonds. These results are consistent with the idea that local conformational fluctuations and stabilities are important determinants of apparent pKa values of ionizable residues in proteins. Proteins 2014; 82:3132–3143. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
We prepared, by solution‐phase methods, and fully characterized three analogs of the membrane‐active peptaibiotic alamethicin F50/5, bearing a single trifluoroacetyl (Tfa) label at the N‐terminus, at position 9 (central region) or at position 19 (C‐terminus), and with the three Gln at positions 7, 18, and 19 replaced by Glu(OMe) residues. To add the Tfa label at position 9 or 19, a γ‐trifluoroacetylated α,γ‐diaminobutyric acid (Dab) residue was incorporated as a replacement for the original Val9 or Glu(OMe)19 amino acid. We performed a detailed conformational analysis of the three analogs (using FT‐IR absorption, CD, 2D‐NMR, and X‐ray diffraction), which clearly showed that Tfa labeling does not introduce any dramatic backbone modification in the predominantly α‐helical structure of the parent peptaibiotic. The results of an initial solid‐state 19F‐NMR study on one of the analogs favor the conclusion that the Tfa group is a very promising reporter for the analysis of peptaibiotic? membrane interactions. Finally, we found that the antimicrobial activities of the three newly synthesized analogs depend on the position of the Tfa label in the peptide sequence.  相似文献   

16.
To investigate the structural role played by isostructural unbranched alkyl‐chains on the conformational ensemble and stability of β‐turn structures, the conformational properties of a designed model peptide: Plm‐Pro‐Gly‐Pda ( 1 , Plm: H3C—(CH2)14—CONH—; Pda: —CONH— (CH2)14—CH3) have been examined and compared with the parent peptide: Boc‐Pro‐Gly‐NHMe ( 2 , Boc: tert‐butoxycarbonyl; NHMe: N‐methylamide). The characteristic 13C NMR chemical‐shifts of the Pro Cβ and Cγ resonances ascertained the incidence of an all‐trans peptide‐bond in low polarity deuterochloroform solution. Using FTIR and 1H NMR spectroscopy, we establish that apolar alkyl‐chains flanking a β‐turn promoting Pro‐Gly sequence impart definite incremental stability to the well‐defined hydrogen‐bonded structure. The assessment of 1H NMR derived thermodynamic parameters of the hydrogen‐bonded amide‐NHs via variable temperature indicate that much weaker hydrophobic interactions do contribute to the stability of folded reverse turn structures. The far‐UV CD spectral patterns of 1 and 2 in 2,2,2‐trifluoroethanol are consistent with Pro‐Gly specific type II β‐turn structure, concomitantly substantiate that the flanking alkyl‐chains induce substantial bias in enhanced β‐turn populations. In view of structural as well as functional importance of the Pro‐Gly mediated secondary structures, besides biochemical and biological significance of proteins lipidation via myristoylation or palmytoilation, we highlight potential convenience of the unbranched Plm and Pda moieities not only as main‐chain N‐ and C‐terminal protecting groups but also to mimic and stabilize specific isolated secondary and supersecondary structural components frequently observed in proteins and polypeptides. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 99: 419–426, 2013.  相似文献   

17.
Although the N‐terminal region in human apolipoprotein (apo) A‐I is thought to stabilize the lipid‐free structure of the protein, its role in lipid binding is unknown. Using synthetic fragment peptides, we examined the lipid‐binding properties of the first 43 residues (1–43) of apoA‐I in comparison with residues 44–65 and 220–241, which have strong lipid affinity in the molecule. Circular dichroism measurements demonstrated that peptides corresponding to each segment have potential propensity to form α‐helical structure in trifluoroethanol. Spectroscopic and thermodynamic measurements revealed that apoA‐I (1–43) peptide has the strong ability to bind to lipid vesicles and to form α‐helical structure comparable to apoA‐I (220–241) peptide. Substitution of Tyr‐18 located at the center of the most hydrophobic region in residues 1–43 with a helix‐breaking proline resulted in the impaired lipid binding, indicating that the α‐helical structure in this region is required to trigger the lipid binding. In contrast, apoA‐I (44–65) peptide exhibited a lower propensity to form α‐helical structure upon binding to lipid, and apoA‐I (44–65/S55P) peptide exhibited diminished, but not completely impaired, lipid binding, suggesting that the central region of residues 44–65 is not pivotally involved in the formation of the α‐helical structure and lipid binding. These results indicate that the most N‐terminal region of apoA‐I molecule, residues 1–43, contributes to the lipid interaction of apoA‐I through the hydrophobic helical residues. Copyright © 2008 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

18.
Brevinin‐1BYa (FLPILASLAAKFGPKLFCLVTKKC), first isolated from skin secretions of the foothill yellow‐legged frog Rana boylii, shows broad‐spectrum activity, being particularly effective against opportunistic yeast pathogens. The structure of brevinin‐1BYa was investigated in various solution and membrane‐mimicking environments by proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H‐NMR) spectroscopy and molecular modelling. The peptide does not possess a secondary structure in aqueous solution. In a 33% 2,2,2‐trifluoroethanol (TFE‐d3)‐H2O solvent mixture, as well as in membrane‐mimicking sodium dodecyl sulfate and dodecylphosphocholine micelles, the peptide's structure is characterised by a flexible helix‐hinge‐helix motif, with the hinge located at the Gly13/Pro14 residues, and the two α‐helices extending from Pro3 to Phe12 and from Pro14 to Thr21. Positional studies involving the peptide in sodium dodecyl sulfate and dodecylphosphocholine micelles using 5‐doxyl‐labelled stearic acid and manganese chloride paramagnetic probes show that the peptide's helical segments lie parallel to the micellar surface, with the residues on the hydrophobic face of the amphipathic helices facing towards the micelle core and the hydrophilic residues pointing outwards, suggesting that the peptide exerts its biological activity by a non–pore‐forming mechanism.  相似文献   

19.
The N‐terminal 1–34 segments of both parathyroid hormone (PTH) and parathyroid hormone‐related protein (PTHrP) bind and activate the same membrane receptor in spite of major differences in their amino acid sequence. The hypothesis was made that they share the same bioactive conformation when bound to the receptor. A common structural motif in all bioactive fragments of the hormone in water/trifluoroethanol mixtures or in aqueous solution containing detergent micelles is the presence of two helical segments at the N‐ and C‐termini of the sequence. In order to stabilize the helical structures, we have recently synthesized and studied the PTHrP(1–34) analog [(Lys13–As p17, Lys26–As p30)]PTHrP(1–34)NH2, which contains lactam‐constrained Lys‐Asp side chains at positions i, i+4. This very potent agonist exhibits enhanced helix stability with respect to the corresponding linear peptide and also two flexible sites at positions 12 and 19 in 1:1 trifluoroethanol/water. These structural elements have been suggested to play a critical role in bioactivity. In the present work we have extended our conformational studies on the bicyclic lactam‐constrained analog to aqueous solution. By CD, 2D‐NMR and structure calculations we have shown that in water two helical segments are present in the region of the lactam bridges (13–18, and 26–31) with high flexibility around Gly12 and Arg19. Thus, the essential structural features observed in the aqueous‐organic medium are maintained in water even if, in this solvent, the overall structure is more flexible. Our findings confirm the stabilizing effect of side‐chain lactam constraints on the α‐helical structure. Copyright © 1999 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

20.
Recent research has implicated the C‐terminus of G‐protein coupled receptors in key events such as receptor activation and subsequent intracellular sorting, yet obtaining structural information of the entire C‐tail has proven a formidable task. Here, a peptide corresponding to the full‐length C‐tail of the human CB1 receptor (residues 400–472) was expressed in E.coli and purified in a soluble form. Circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy revealed that the peptide adopts an α‐helical conformation in negatively charged and zwitterionic detergents (48–51% and 36–38%, respectively), whereas it exhibited the CD signature of unordered structure at low concentration in aqueous solution. Interestingly, 27% helicity was displayed at high peptide concentration suggesting that self‐association induces helix formation in the absence of a membrane mimetic. NMR spectroscopy of the doubly labeled (15N‐ and 13C‐) C‐terminus in dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) identified two amphipathic α‐helical domains. The first domain, S401‐F412, corresponds to the helix 8 common to G protein‐coupled receptors while the second domain, A440‐M461, is a newly identified structural motif in the distal region of the carboxyl‐terminus of the receptor. Molecular modeling of the C‐tail in DPC indicates that both helices lie parallel to the plane of the membrane with their hydrophobic and hydrophilic faces poised for critical interactions. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 91: 565–573, 2009. This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The “Published Online” date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com  相似文献   

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