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1.
In an attempt to delineate potential folding initiation sites for different protein structural motifs, we have synthesized series of peptides that span the entire length of the polypeptide chain of two proteins, and examined their conformational preferences in aqueous solution using proton nuclear magnetic resonance and circular dichroism spectroscopy. We describe here the behavior of peptides derived from a simple four-helix bundle protein, myohemerythrin. The peptides correspond to the sequences of the four long helices (the A, B, C and D helices), the N- and C-terminal loops and the connecting sequences between the helices. The peptides corresponding to the helices of the folded protein all exhibit preferences for helix-like conformations in solution. The conformational ensembles of the A- and D-helix peptides contain ordered helical forms, as shown by extensive series of medium-range nuclear Overhauser effect connectivities, while the B- and C-helix peptides exhibit conformational preferences for nascent helix. All four peptides adopt ordered helical conformations in mixtures of trifluoroethanol and water. The terminal and interconnecting loop peptides also appear to contain appreciable populations of conformers with backbone phi and psi angles in the alpha-region and include highly populated hydrophobic cluster and/or turn conformations in some cases. Trifluoroethanol is unable to drive these peptides towards helical conformations. Overall, the peptide fragments of myohemerythrin have a marked preference towards secondary structure formation in aqueous solution. In contrast, peptide fragments derived from the beta-sandwich protein plastocyanin are relatively devoid of secondary structure in aqueous solution (see accompanying paper). These results suggest that the two different protein structural motifs may require different propensities for formation of local elements of secondary structure to initiate folding, and that there is a prepartitioning of conformational space determined by the local amino acid sequence that is different for the helical and beta-sandwich structural motifs.  相似文献   

2.
Folding propensities of peptide fragments of myoglobin.   总被引:8,自引:5,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Myoglobin has been studied extensively as a paradigm for protein folding. As part of an ongoing study of potential folding initiation sites in myoglobin, we have synthetized a series of peptides covering the entire sequence of sperm whale myoglobin. We report here on the conformation preferences of a series of peptides that cover the region from the A helix to the FG turn. Structural propensities were determined using circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy in aqueous solution, trifluoroethanol, and methanol. Peptides corresponding to helical regions in the native protein, namely the B, C, D, and E helices, populate the alpha region of (phi, psi) space in water solution but show no measurable helix formation except in the presence of trifluoroethanol. The F-helix sequence has a much lower propensity to populate helical conformations even in TFE. Despite several attempts, we were not successful in synthesizing a peptide corresponding to the A-helix region that was soluble in water. A peptide termed the AB domain was constructed spanning the A- and B-helix sequences. The AB domain is not soluble in water, but shows extensive helix formation throughout the peptide when dissolved in methanol, with a break in the helix at a site close to the A-B helix junction in the intact folded myoglobin protein. With the exception of one local preference for a turn conformation stabilized by hydrophobic interactions, the peptides corresponding to turns in the folded protein do not measurably populate beta-turn conformations in water, and the addition of trifluoroethanol does not enhance the formation of either helical or turn structure. In contrast to the series of peptides described here, either studies of peptides from the GH region of myoglobin show a marked tendency to populate helical structures (H), nascent helical structures (G), or turn conformations (GH peptide) in water solution. This region, together with the A-helix and part of the B-helix, has been shown to participate in an early folding intermediate. The complete analysis of conformational properties of isolated myoglobin peptides supports the hypothesis that spontaneous secondary structure formation in local regions of the polypeptide may play an important role in the initiation of protein folding.  相似文献   

3.
The crystal structures of two oligopeptides containing di-n-propylglycine (Dpg) residues, Boc-Gly-Dpg-Gly-Leu-OMe (1) and Boc-Val-Ala-Leu-Dpg-Val-Ala-Leu-Val-Ala-Leu-Dpg-Val-Ala-Leu-OMe (2) are presented. Peptide 1 adopts a type I'beta-turn conformation with Dpg(2)-Gly(3) at the corner positions. The 14-residue peptide 2 crystallizes with two molecules in the asymmetric unit, both of which adopt alpha-helical conformations stabilized by 11 successive 5 --> 1 hydrogen bonds. In addition, a single 4 --> 1 hydrogen bond is also observed at the N-terminus. All five Dpg residues adopt backbone torsion angles (phi, psi) in the helical region of conformational space. Evaluation of the available structural data on Dpg peptides confirm the correlation between backbone bond angle N-C(alpha)-C' (tau) and the observed backbone phi,psi values. For tau > 106 degrees, helices are observed, while fully extended structures are characterized by tau < 106 degrees. The mean tau values for extended and folded conformations for the Dpg residue are 103.6 degrees +/- 1.7 degrees and 109.9 degrees +/- 2.6 degrees, respectively.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Plastocyanin is a predominantly beta-sheet protein containing a type I copper center. The conformational ensemble of a denatured state of apo-plastocyanin formed in solution under conditions of low salt and neutral pH has been investigated by multidimensional heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy. Chemical shift assignments were obtained by using three-dimensional triple-resonance NMR experiments to trace through-bond heteronuclear connectivities along the backbone and side chains. The (3)J(HN,Halpha) coupling constants, (15)N-edited proton-proton nuclear Overhauser effects (NOEs), and (15)N relaxation parameters were also measured for the purpose of structural and dynamic characterization. Most of the residues corresponding to beta-strands in the folded protein exhibit small upfield shifts of the (13)C(alpha) and (13)CO resonances relative to random coil values, suggesting a slight preference for backbone dihedral angles in the beta region of (phi,psi) space. This is further supported by the presence of strong sequential d(alphaN)(i, i + 1) NOEs throughout the sequence. The few d(NN)(i, i + 1) proton NOEs that are observed are mostly in regions that form loops in the native plastocyanin structure. No medium or long-range NOEs were observed. A short sequence, between residues 59 and 63, was found to populate a nonnative helical conformation in the unfolded state, as indicated by the shift of the (13)C(alpha), (13)CO, and (1)H(alpha) resonances relative to random coil values and by the decreased values of the (3)J(HN,Halpha) coupling constants. The (15)N relaxation parameters indicate restriction of motions on a nanosecond timescale in this region. Intriguingly, this helical conformation is present in a sequence that is close to but not in the same location as the single short helix in the native folded protein. The results are consistent with earlier NMR studies of peptide fragments of plastocyanin and confirm that the regions of the sequence that form beta-strands in the native protein spontaneously populate the beta-region of (phi,psi) space under folding conditions, even in the absence of stabilizing tertiary interactions. We conclude that the state of apo-plastocyanin present under nondenaturing conditions is a noncompact unfolded state with some evidence of nativelike and nonnative local structuring that may be initiation sites for folding of the protein.  相似文献   

6.
1H nuclear magnetic resonance experiments indicate formation of secondary structures in water solutions of a synthetic immunogenic peptide of sequence EVVPHKKMHKDFLEKIGGL corresponding to the C-helix (residues 69 to 87) of myohemerythrin. The conformational ensemble consists of a set of turn-like structures, distributed over the C-terminal half of the peptide and rapidly interconverting by way of unfolded states. These structures, termed nascent helix, are stabilized into helical structure with long-range order in water/trifluorethanol mixtures. Circular dichroism measurements confirm the presence of 50% helix in water/trifluoroethanol but show no evidence of helicity in water solutions of the peptide. It is apparent that no one member of the transient set of helical conformations which constitutes the nascent helix is sufficiently long to be detectable by circular dichroism experiments. No preferred conformations could be detected by nuclear magnetic resonance in the N-terminal half of the peptide, either in water or water/trifluoroethanol mixtures. This region of the peptide is stabilized in helix by long-range interactions in the folded protein. The possible role of nascent secondary structure in induction of antipeptide antibodies and in initiation of protein folding is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The dynamics and conformation of the peptide antigen MHKDFLEKIGGL bound to the Fab' fragment of the monoclonal antipeptide antibody B13A2, raised against a peptide from myohemerythrin, have been investigated by isotope-edited NMR techniques. The peptides were labeled with 15N (98%) or 13C (99%) at the backbone of individual amino acid residues. Well-resolved amide proton and nitrogen backbone resonances were obtained and assigned for eight of the 12 residues of this bound peptide. Significant resonance line width and chemical shift differences were observed. The 15N and 1H line width variations are attributed to differential backbone mobilities among the bound peptide residues which are consistent with the previously mapped epitope of this peptide antigen. Local structural information was obtained from isotope-directed NOE studies. The approximate distances associated with the experimental NOEs were estimated on the basis of a theoretical NOE analysis involving the relative integrated intensities of the NOE and source peaks. In this way, the sequential NH-NH NOEs obtained for seven of the Fab'-bound peptide residues were shown to correspond to interproton separations of approximately 3 A or less. Such short distances indicate that the backbone dihedral angles of these residues are in the alpha rather than the beta region of phi,psi conformational space; the peptide most likely adopts a helical conformation from F5 to G11 within the antibody combining site. The significance of these results with respect to the type and extent of conformational information obtainable from studies of high molecular weight systems is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Recent analysis of alpha helices in protein crystal structures, available in literature, revealed hydrated alpha helical segments in which, water molecule breaks open helix 5-->1 hydrogen bond by inserting itself, hydrogen bonds to both C=O and NH groups of helix hydrogen bond without disrupting the helix hydrogen bond, and hydrogen bonds to either C=O or NH of helix hydrogen bond. These hydrated segments display a variety of turn conformations and are thought to be 'folding intermediates' trapped during folding-unfolding of alpha helices. A role for reverse turns is implicated in the folding of alpha helices. We considered a hexapeptide model Ac-1TGAAKA6-NH2 from glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, corresponding to a hydrated helical segment to assess its role in helix folding. The sequence is a site for two 'folding intermediates'. The conformational features of the model peptide have been investigated by 1H 2D NMR techniques and quantum mechanical perturbative configuration interaction over localized orbitals (PCILO) method. Theoretical modeling largely correlates with experimental observations. Based upon the amide proton temperature coefficients, the observed d alpha n(i, i + 1), d alpha n(i, i + 2), dnn(i, i + 1), d beta n(i, i + 1) NOEs and the results from theoretical modeling, we conclude that the residues of the peptide sample alpha helical and neck regions of the Ramachandran phi, psi map with reduced conformational entropy and there is a potential for turn conformations at N and C terminal ends of the peptide. The role of reduced conformational entropy and turn potential in helix formation have been discussed. We conclude that the peptide sequence can serve as a 'folding intermediate' in the helix folding of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

9.
Two synthetic peptides corresponding to the N- and C-terminal halves of a 23 amino acid sequence representing an immunodominant domain of the simian immunodeficiency virus of macaque origin (SIVmac) were examined for conformational preferences in aqueous solution by proton nuclear magnetic resonance methods. The two constituent peptides, termed A12-7 (Ala597-Ile-Glu-Lys-Tyr-Leu-Glu-Asp-Gln-Ala-Gln607) and A12-9 (Leu608-Asn-Ala-Trp-Gly-Cys-Ala-Phe-Arg-Gln-Val-Ser619), were found to contain a considerable conformational preference for states in which the backbone phi and psi angles populate the alpha region of the Ramachandran plot. Further, for peptide A12-9, the types and intensities of the nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) connectivities between protons in the polypeptide backbone suggest that these states appear to include helical turns. The temperature dependence of the amide proton chemical shifts indicates that some degree of intramolecular hydrogen bonding occurs in these peptides. These results are consistent with a model in which immunogenic peptides which induce antibodies reactive with the intact protein from which the peptide sequence was derived contain conformational preferences in water solution for states other than the extended-chain forms typically found in "random coil" peptides.  相似文献   

10.
Structurally characterizing partially folded peptides is problematic given the nature of their transient conformational states. 13C-NMR relaxation data can provide information on the geometry of bond rotations, motional restrictions, and correlated bond rotations of the backbone and side chains and, therefore, is one approach that is useful to assess the presence of folded structure within a conformational ensemble. A peptide 12mer, R1GITVNG7KTYGR12, has been shown to partially fold in a relatively stable beta-hairpin conformation centered at NG. Here, five residues, G2, V5, G7, Y10, G11, were selectively 13C-enriched, and 13C-NMR relaxation experiments were performed to obtain auto- and cross-correlation motional order parameters, correlation times, bond rotation angular variances, and bond rotational correlation coefficients. Our results indicate that, of the three glycines, G7 within the hairpin beta-turn displays the most correlated phi(t),psi(t) rotations with its axis of rotation bisecting the angle defined by the H-C-H bonds. These positively correlated bond rotations give rise to "twisting" type motions of the HCH group. V5 and Y10 phi,psi bond rotations are also positively correlated, with their CbetaCalphaH groups undergoing similar "twisting" type motions. Motions of near-terminal residues G2 and G11 are less restricted and less correlated and are best described as wobbling-in-a-cone. V5 and Y10 side-chain motions, aside from being highly restricted, were found to be correlated with phi,psi bond rotations. At 303 K, where the hairpin is considered "unfolded," the peptide exists in a transient, collapsed state because backbone and side-chain motions of V5, G7, and Y10 remain relatively restricted, unlike their counterparts in GXG-based tripeptides. These results provide unique information toward understanding conformational variability in the unfolded state of proteins, which is necessary to solve the protein folding problem.  相似文献   

11.
On the basis of joint consideration of distance dependences between amide proton NH and protons C alpha H, NH, C beta H of the preceding in amino acid sequence residue from the torsion angles phi psi, chi 1, the correlation diagram of these proton-proton distances with the regions of sterically allowed conformational space (phi, psi) is presented and the method for the determination of the L-amino acid residues backbone conformations is proposed. The diagram was used for the determination of backbone conformations of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor and trypsin inhibitors E and K from Dendroaspis polylepis using the data from two-dimensional 1H-NMR spectroscopy. The analysis of backbone conformations was carried out. The individual elements of these protein molecules secondary structure were characterized and their high conformational homology was shown. The inference about qualitative coincidence of three protein molecules conformation in solution, preservation of secondary structure basic elements and their similarity with bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor crystalline structure was made.  相似文献   

12.
Modeling protein loops using a phi i + 1, psi i dimer database.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
We present an automated method for modeling backbones of protein loops. The method samples a database of phi i + 1 and psi i angles constructed from a nonredundant version of the Protein Data Bank (PDB). The dihedral angles phi i + 1 and psi i completely define the backbone conformation of a dimer when standard bond lengths, bond angles, and a trans planar peptide configuration are used. For the 400 possible dimers resulting from 20 natural amino acids, a list of allowed phi i + 1, psi i pairs for each dimer is created by pooling all such pairs from the loop segments of each protein in the nonredundant version of the PDB. Starting from the N-terminus of the loop sequence, conformations are generated by assigning randomly selected pairs of phi i + 1, psi i for each dimer from the respective pool using standard bond lengths, bond angles, and a trans peptide configuration. We use this database to simulate protein loops of lengths varying from 5 to 11 amino acids in five proteins of known three-dimensional structures. Typically, 10,000-50,000 models are simulated for each protein loop and are evaluated for stereochemical consistency. Depending on the length and sequence of a given loop, 50-80% of the models generated have no stereochemical strain in the backbone atoms. We demonstrate that, when simulated loops are extended to include flanking residues from homologous segments, only very few loops from an ensemble of sterically allowed conformations orient the flanking segments consistent with the protein topology. The presence of near-native backbone conformations for loops from five different proteins suggests the completeness of the dimeric database for use in modeling loops of homologous proteins. Here, we take advantage of this observation to design a method that filters near-native loop conformations from an ensemble of sterically allowed conformations. We demonstrate that our method eliminates the need for a loop-closure algorithm and hence allows for the use of topological constraints of the homologous proteins or disulfide constraints to filter near-native loop conformations.  相似文献   

13.
The conformational analysis of peptides containing a single alpha, alpha-di-n-propylglycine (Dpg) residue incorporated into valine-rich sequences has been undertaken in order to delineate the possible role of sequence effects in stabilizing fully extended (C(5)) or local helical conformations at this residue. The three peptides Boc-Val-Dpg-Val-OMe (3), Boc-Val-Val-Dpg-Val-OMe (4), Boc-Val-Val-Dpg-Val-Val-OMe (5), have been studied by (1)H-nmr methods in chloroform (CDCl(3)) and dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) solutions. Even in a relatively poorly solvating medium like CDCl(3), all the valine NH groups appear to be solvent-exposed, suggesting an absence of folded beta-turn conformations. However, in both CDCl(3) and DMSO the Dpg NH groups in all the three peptides appear to behave like apparently solvent-inaccessible groups. In fully extended C(5) conformations, the proximity of the NH and CO groups of Dpg may preclude effective solvation due to a combination of stereoelectronic factors. Nuclear Overhauser effects provide support for the largely extended backbones. The crystal structure of peptide 3 reveals an extended conformation at Dpg (2) with straight phi = -176 degrees, psi = 180 degrees. A correlation between the crystallographically observed backbone conformation and solution nmr parameters in DMSO has been attempted using available data. Dpg residues placed in poor helix stabilizing environments may be expected to favor a local C(5) conformation.  相似文献   

14.
Folding of polypeptide chains induced by the amino acid side-chains   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Conformational calculations with the use of semi-empirical potential functions have been applied to the analysis of the folding of peptide chains. In particular, the part played by the amino acid side-chains in the adoption of folded conformations has been investigated.The results show that the preferred conformations of short peptides are mostly extended ones. However, from a given peptide chain-length, the side-chain to backbone and side-chain to side-chain interactions become strong enough so that definite sequences of amino acids can induce a transition from extended to folded conformations. We propose to call these folded structures “conformational nuclei”. The type of “nucleus” formed is dependent on both the amino acid composition and the sequence.Our results strongly support the hypothesis that folding of polypeptide chains can occur through a nucleation process that could be induced by the side-chains.  相似文献   

15.
Non-glycine residues in proteins are rarely observed to have "left-handed helical" conformations. For glycine, however, this conformation is common. To determine the contributions of left-handed helical residues to the stability of a protein, two such residues in phage T4 lysozyme, Asn55 and Lys124, were replaced with glycine. The mutant proteins fold normally and are fully active, showing that left-handed non-glycine residues, although rare, do not have an indispensable role in the folding of the protein or in its activity. The thermodynamic stability of the Lys124 to Gly variant is essentially identical with that of wild-type lysozyme. The Asn55 to Gly mutant protein is marginally less stable (0.5 kcal/mol). These results indicate that the conformational energy of a glycine and a non-glycine residue in the left-handed helical conformation are very similar. This is consistent with some theoretical energy distributions, but is inconsistent with others, which suggest that replacements of the sort described here might increase the stability of the protein by up to 5 kcal/mol. Crystallographic analysis of the mutant proteins shows that the backbone conformation of the Lys124 to Gly variant is essentially identical with that of the wild-type structure. In the case of the Asn55 to Gly replacement, however, the (phi, psi) values of residue 55 change by about 20 degrees. This suggests that the energy minimum for left-handed glycine residues is not the same as that for non-glycine residues. This is strongly indicated also by a survey of accurately determined protein crystal structures, which suggests that the energy minimum for left-handed glycine residues is near (phi = 90 degrees, psi = 0 degrees), whereas that for non-glycine residues is close to (phi = 60 degrees, psi = 30 degrees). This apparent energy minimum for glycine is not clearly predicted by any of the theoretical (phi, psi) energy contour maps.  相似文献   

16.
Synthetic peptides with defined secondary structure scaffolds, namely hairpins and helices, containing tryptophan residues, have been investigated in this study to probe the influence of a large number of aromatic amino acids on backbone conformations. Solution NMR investigations of Boc-W-L-W-(D)P-G-W-L-W-OMe (peptide 1), designed to form a well-folded hairpin, clearly indicates the influence of flanking aromatic residues at the (D)Pro-Gly region on both turn nucleation and strand propagation. Indole-pyrrolidine interactions in this peptide lead to the formation of the less-frequent type I' turn at the (D)Pro-Gly segment and frayed strand regions, with the strand residues adopting local helical conformations. An analog of peptide 1 with an Aib-Gly turn-nucleated hairpin (Boc-W-L-W-U-G-W-L-W-OMe (peptide 2)) shows a preference for helical structures in solution, in both chloroform and methanol. Peptides with either one (Boc-W-L-W-U-W-L-W-OMe (peptide 3)) or two (Boc-U-W-L-W-U-W-L-W-OMe (peptide 4)) helix-nucleating Aib residues give rise to the well-folded helical conformations in the chloroform solution. The results are indicative of a preference for helical folding in peptides containing a large number of Trp residues. Investigation of a tetrapeptide analog of peptide 2, Boc-W-U-G-W-OMe (peptide 5), in solution and in the crystal state (by X-ray diffraction), also indicates a preference for a helical fold. Additionally, peptide 5 is stabilized in crystals by both aromatic interactions and an array of weak interactions. Examination of Trp-rich sequences in protein structures, however, reveals no secondary structure preference, suggesting that other stabilizing interactions in a well-folded protein may offset the influence of indole rings on backbone conformations.  相似文献   

17.
The study of backbone and side-chain internal motions in proteins and peptides is crucial to having a better understanding of protein/peptide "structure" and to characterizing unfolded and partially folded states of proteins and peptides. To achieve this, however, requires establishing a baseline for internal motions and motional restrictions for all residues in the fully, solvent-exposed "unfolded state." GXG-based tripeptides are the simpliest peptides where residue X is fully solvent exposed in the context of an actual peptide. In this study, a series of GXG-based tripeptides has been synthesized with X being varied to include all twenty common amino acid residues. Proton-coupled and -decoupled (13)C-nmr relaxation measurements have been performed on these twenty tripeptides and various motional models (Lipari-Szabo model free approach, rotational anisotropic diffusion, rotational fluctuations within a potential well, rotational jump model) have been used to analyze relaxation data for derivation of angular variances and motional correlation times for backbone and side-chain chi(1) and chi(2) bonds and methyl group rotations. At 298 K, backbone motional correlation times range from about 50 to 85 ps, whereas side-chain motional correlation times show a much broader spread from about 18 to 80 ps. Angular variances for backbone phi,psi bond rotations range from 11 degrees to 23 degrees and those for side chains vary from 5 degrees to 24 degrees for chi(1) bond rotations and from 5 degrees to 27 degrees for chi(2) bond rotations. Even in these peptide models of the "unfolded state," side-chain angular variances can be as restricted as those for backbone and beta-branched (valine, threonine, and isoleucine) and aromatic side chains display the most restricted motions probably due to steric hinderence with backbone atoms. Comparison with motional data on residues in partially folded, beta-sheet-forming peptides indicates that side-chain motions of at least hydrophobic residues are less restricted in the partially folded state, suggesting that an increase in side-chain conformational entropy may help drive early-stage protein folding. Copyright 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
It is important to understand the conformational biases that are present in unfolded states to understand protein folding. In this context, it is surprising that even a short tripeptide like AFA samples folded/ordered conformation as demonstrated recently by NMR experiments of the peptide in aqueous solution at 280 K. In this paper, we present molecular dynamics simulation of the peptide in explicit water using OPLS-AA/L all-atom force field. The results are in overall agreement with NMR results and provide some further insights. The peptide samples turn and extended conformational forms corresponding to minima in free energy landscape. Frequent transitions between the minima are observed due to modest free energy barriers. The turn conformation seems to be stabilized by hydrophobic interactions and possibly by bridging water molecules between backbone donors and acceptors. Thus the peptide does not sample conformations randomly, but samples well defined conformations. The peptide served as a model for folding-unfolding equilibrium in the context of peptide folding. Further, implications for drug design are also discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The peptide Boc-L-Val-deltaPhe-deltaPhe-L-Ile-OCH3 was synthesized using the azlactone method in the solution phase, and its crystal and molecular structures were determined by X-ray diffraction. Single crystals were grown by slow evaporation from solution in methanol at 25 degrees C. The crystals belong to an orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) with a = 12.882(7) A, b = 15.430(5) A, c = 18.330(5) A and Z = 4. The structure was determined by direct methods and refined by a least-squares procedure to an R-value of 0.073. The peptide adopts a right-handed 3(10)-helical conformation with backbone torsion angles: phi1 = 56.0(6)degrees, psi1 = -38.0(6)degrees, phi2 = -53.8(6)degrees, psi2 = 23.6(6)degrees, phi3 = -82.9(6)degrees, psi3 = -10.6(7)degrees, phi4 = 124.9(5)degrees. All the peptide bonds are trans. The conformation is stabilized by intramolecular 4-->1 hydrogen bonds involving Boc carbonyl oxygen and NH of deltaPhe3 and CO of Val1 and NH of Ile4. It is noteworthy that the two other chemically very similar peptides: Boc-Val-deltaPhe-deltaPhe-Ala-OCH3 (i) and Boc-Val-deltaPhe-deltaPhe-Val-OCH3 (ii) with differences only at the fourth position have been found to adopt folded conformations with two overlapping beta-turns of types II and III', respectively, whereas the present peptide adopts two overlapping beta-turns of type III. Thus the introduction of Ile at fourth position in a sequence Val-deltaPhe-deltaPhe-X results in the formation of a 3(10)-helix. The crystal structure is stabilized by intermolecular hydrogen bonds involving NH of Val1 and carbonyl oxygen of a symmetry related (-x, y - 1/2, 1/2 + z) deltaPhe2 and NH of deltaPhe2 with carbonyl oxygen of a symmetry related (x, y1/2, 1/2 + z) Ile4. This gives rise to long columns of helical molecules linked head to tail running along [010] direction.  相似文献   

20.
The conformational profile of the eight stereoisomeric 2-amino-3-phenylnorbornane-2-carboxylic acids (2-amino-3-phenylbicyclo[2.2.1]heptane-2-carboxylic acids) has been assessed by computational methods. These molecules constitute a series of four enantiomeric pairs that can be considered as rigid analogues of either L- or D-phenylalanine. The conformational space of their N-acetyl methylamide derivatives has been explored within the molecular mechanics framework, using the parm94 set of parameters of the AMBER force field. Local minimum energy conformations have been further investigated at the ab initio level by means of the Hartree-Fock and second order Moller-Plesset perturbation energy calculations using a 6-31G(d) basis set. The results of the present work suggest that the bulky norbornane structure induces two kinds of conformational constraints on the residues. On one hand, those of a steric nature directly imposed by the bicycle on the peptide backbone and, on the other hand, those that limit the orientations attainable by the phenyl ring which, in turn, reduces further the flexibility of the peptide backbone. A comparative analysis of the conformational profile of the phenylnorbornane amino acids with that of the norbornane amino acids devoid of the beta-phenyl substituent suggests that the norbornane system hampers the residue to adopt extended conformations in favour of C7-like structures. However, the bicycle itself does not impart a clear preference for any of the two possible C7 minima. It is the aromatic side chain, which is forced to adopt an almost eclipsed orientation, that breaks this symmetry introducing a marked preference for a single region of the (phi, psi) conformational space in each of the phenylalanine norbornane analogues investigated.  相似文献   

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