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1.
Recently, Presta and Rose proposed that a necessary condition for helix formation is the presence of residues at the N- and C-termini (called NTBs and CTBs) whose side chains can form hydrogen bonds with the initial four amides and the last four carbonyls of the helix, which otherwise lack intrahelical hydrogen bonding partners. We have tested this hypothesis by conformational analysis by circular dichroism (CD) of a synthetic peptide corresponding to a region (171-188) of the protein carboxypeptidase A; in the protein, residues 174 to 186 are helical and are flanked by NTBs and CTBs. Since helix formation in this peptide may also be stabilized by electrostatic interactions, we have compared the helical content of the native peptide with that of several modified peptides designed to enable dissection of different contributions to helix stability. As expected, helix dipole interactions appear to contribute substantially, but we conclude that hydrogen bonding interactions as proposed by Presta and Rose also stabilize helix formation. To assist in comparison of different peptides, we have introduced two concentration-independent CD parameters which are sensitive probes of helix formation.  相似文献   

2.
Conformations of isolated fragments of pancreatic polypeptide   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
K Tonan  Y Kawata  K Hamaguchi 《Biochemistry》1990,29(18):4424-4429
In spite of its short polypeptide chain, the pancreatic polypeptide molecule consists of a polyproline II type helix and alpha-helix. To understand the stability and formation of the alpha-helical region, we prepared some peptide fragments including the helical segment of chicken pancreatic polypeptide and studied their conformations by circular dichroism (CD). PP7-36 (a peptide fragment corresponding to residues 7-36 of chicken pancreatic polypeptide) showed a CD spectrum characteristic of the helix at pH 4.6 and at peptide concentrations as low as 1 microM. PP11-36 was able to form a helical conformation only at high peptide concentrations and not at concentrations lower than 10 microM. However, acetyl PP11-36 (in which the alpha-amino group is acetylated so that no positive charge exists at the N terminus) was able to form the helical conformation at pH 4.6 and at the peptide concentrations where PP11-36 could not. Succinyl PP12-36 (in which the alpha-amino group is succinylated to introduce a negative charge) was also able to form the helical conformation. The CD spectra of PP12-36 and PP13-36 were not characteristic of the helical conformation at all the pH values and peptide concentrations studied. Acetyl PP13-36, which has no charge at the N terminus, did not form the helix. On the other hand, succinyl PP13-36, which has a negative charge at the N-terminal end, did form the helix at pH 4.6. These findings indicate that the presence of the negative charge of carboxylate at the N-terminal region of a peptide fragment is important for helix formation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Mechanisms of beta sheet formation by the human prion protein are not clear yet. In this work, we clarified the role of the region containing C‐half of the second helix and N‐half of the third helix of that protein in the process of alpha helix to beta sheet transition. Solid phase automatic synthesis of the original peptide (CC36: Cys179–Cys214) failed because of the beta hairpin formation in the region 206‐MERVVEQMC‐214 with a high beta strand potential. Using Met206Arg and Val210Arg substitutions, we increased the probability of alpha helix formation by that sequence. After that modification, the complete CC36 peptide with disulfide bond has been synthesized. Modified peptide has been studied by circular dichroism (CD) and fluorescence spectrography. According to the CD spectra analysis, the CC36 peptide contains 37% of residues in beta sheet and just 15% in helix. Thermal analysis under the control of CD shows that the secondary structure content of the peptide is stable from 5°C to 80°C. Dissociation of oligomers of the CC36 peptide finishes at 37°C according to the fluorescence analysis. The CC36 peptide is able to bind Mn2+ cations, which causes small temperature‐associated structural shifts at concentrations of 2 – 10·10?6 M. Predicted beta hairpin of the CC36 peptide (two beta strands are: 184‐IKQHTVT‐190 and 197‐TETDVKM‐205) should be the part of a longer beta hairpin from the scrapie form of the prion protein (PrPSc). Analogs of the CC36 peptide may be considered as antigens for the future development of a vaccine against PrPSc. Proteins 2016; 84:1462–1479. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
A collagen-like peptide with the sequence (GER)(15) GPCCG was synthesized to study the formation of a triple helix in the absence of proline residues. This peptide can form a triple helix at acidic and basic pH, but is insoluble around neutral pH. The formation of a triple helix can be used to covalently oxidize the cysteine residues into a disulfide knot. Three disulfide bonds are formed between the three chains as has been found at the carboxyl-terminal end of the type III collagen triple helix. This is a new method to covalently link collagen-like peptides with a stereochemistry that occurs in nature. The peptide undergoes a reversible, cooperative triple helix coil transition with a transition midpoint (T(m)) of 17 to 20 degrees C at acidic pH and 32 to 37 degrees C at basic pH. At acidic pH there was little influence of the T(m) on the salt concentration of the buffer. At basic pH increasing the salt concentration reduced the T(m) to values comparable to the stability at acidic pH. These experiments show that the tripeptide unit GER which occurs frequently in collagen sequences can form a triple helical structure in the absence of more typical collagen-like tripeptide units and that charge-charge interactions play a role in the stabilization of the triple helix of this peptide.  相似文献   

5.
J F Collawn  Y Paterson 《Biopolymers》1990,29(8-9):1289-1296
The conformations of two 17-residue peptide analogues derived from the C-terminal sequence of pigeon cytochrome c (native sequence = KAERADLIAYLKQATAK) were examined in aqueous and lipid environments by CD spectroscopy. The two analogues, KKLLKKLIAYLKQATAK (K peptide) and EELLEELIAYLKQATAK (E peptide), were made amphipathic with respect to helical segregation by substituting a 6-residue sequence at the N-terminus of the native peptide. Their structures were compared to the native peptide under aqueous conditions of varying pH and temperature, and in the presence of liposomes composed of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine in the ratio of 9:1. The results indicated that the native peptide remains unstructured under all the conditions examined even though this region of the native molecule is surface exposed and helical. The E peptide, however, was helical under aqueous conditions at 25 degrees C from pH 2-10 with a maximum helicity at pH 4 (54% helix from analysis of CD data). The ellipticity of the E peptide at pH 4 and 8 was concentration dependent, indicating an aggregation phenomenon. In studies in which the CD spectrum was measured at different temperatures, the E peptide became more helical at lower temperatures at pH 4 but not at pH 8. Upon interaction with a lipid membrane in the form of liposomes, there appeared to be a slight destabilization in the structure of the E peptide. The K peptide in an aqueous environment behaved like the native peptide in that it was structureless at all pHs and temperatures examined. In the presence of liposomes, however, this peptide had a high helical content (75% helix from analysis of CD data). These findings suggest that while stabilization of the helix dipole with negative charges at the N-terminus are important in inducing helical conformation in the E peptide, hydrophobic interactions created during aggregation appear to provide the principal stabilizing force. The results with the K peptide demonstrate that the positive N-terminal sequence of this peptide is able to interact with the negatively charged head groups in the phospholipid membrane in such a fashion as to stabilize a helical structure that is not apparent in an aqueous environment alone.  相似文献   

6.
The peptide segment corresponding to helix A4 in acyl-coenzyme-A-binding protein (ACBP) is an exceptionally stable helix in the denatured state of the protein as well as in its isolated form. Circular dichroism spectroscopy showed an alpha-helix content in the helix A4 peptide (HA4) of 45%, and under denaturing conditions at pH 2.3, helix conformations are still populated in 24% of the ensemble of molecules. The structure of HA4 at atomic resolution was assessed using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Long-range NOEs between remote residues at opposite peptide ends suggested the formation of an antiparallel homodimer, and the resulting structure was treated as the minimum higher-order structure. The dimerization property of helix A4 is maintained in the full-length protein under denaturing conditions. NMR diffusion studies and concentration-dependent experiments on ACBP at low pH proved the formation of dimers and revealed a cooperative stabilization of helix A4 in this process. This emphasizes its special role in the structure formation in the denatured state of ACBP. No dimers are formed in the presence of guanidine hydrochloride, which underlines the fundamental difference between the nature of these two denatured states.  相似文献   

7.
Melittin (MLT), a 26-residue cationic (net charge +5 at pH 7.2) peptide from bee venom, is well known to be a monomeric, approximately random coil; but when its charges are reduced by titration, by acetylation (net charge +2) or succinylation (net charge -2), or by screening by salt, it goes over to tetrameric alpha-helix. The conversion is promoted by raising the peptide concentration. The tetramer is held together by hydrophobic forces. We have changed the net charge to -6 by acylation with acetylcitric anhydride (a new acylating agent); this anionic derivative forms tetrameric helix at neutral pH, without salt, and at relatively low concentration, conditions under which the cationic MLT does not become helical. Thus, a high net charge is not sufficient to prevent association and helix formation. We have synthesized an anionic melittin analogue of MLT (E-MLT; net charge -4) in which all five lysine and arginine residues are replaced with glutamate, and acetyl and succinyl derivatives of E-MLT (net charges -5 and -6). All three of these are resistant to helix formation. They require much higher NaCl or NaClO4 concentration for helix formation than does MLT. Even CaCl2, MgCl2, and spermine.4HCl are less effective in helicizing E-MLT than MLT. MLT, at pH 7.2, shows increasing helix as the peptide concentration increases (8-120 microM), but E-MLT and its acyl derivatives do not. MLT and acylated MLTs in the helical tetramer show both cold- and heat-induced unfolding, with maximum stability near room temperature. At high temperature, a significant amount of residual structure remains. Heating (to 100 degrees C) monomeric MLT (i.e., MLT at low concentration) or E-MLT results in a monotonic increase in negative ellipticity. In 1.0 M NaCl, E-MLT (at sufficiently high concentration) also shows cold and hot unfolding. The results are discussed in respect to charge-charge and charge-dipole interactions, and hydrophobic effects. E-MLT is also discussed in relation to proteins of halophilic bacteria, which have higher proportions of anionic residues than do corresponding proteins of nonhalophiles.  相似文献   

8.
The primary structure of the human CstF-64 polyadenylation factor contains 12 nearly identical repeats of a consensus motif of five amino acid residues with the sequence MEAR(A/G). No known function has yet been ascribed to this motif; however, according to secondary structure prediction algorithms, it should form a helical structure in solution. To validate this theoretical prediction, we synthesized a 31 amino acid residue peptide (MEARA(6)) containing six repeats of the MEARA sequence and characterized its structure and stability by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). No effects of concentration on the CD or DSC properties of MEARA(6) were observed, indicating that the peptide is monomeric in solution at concentrations up to 2 mM. The far UV-CD spectra of MEARA(6) indicates that at a low temperature (1 degrees C) the MEARA(6) peptide has a relatively high helical content (76% at pH 2.0 and 65% at pH 7.0). The effects of pH and ionic strength on the CD spectrum of MEARA(6) suggest that a number of electrostatic interactions (e.g., i, i + 3 Arg/Glu ion pair, charge-dipole interactions) contribute to the stability of the helical structure in this peptide. DSC profiles show that the melting of MEARA(6) helix is accompanied by positive change in the enthalpy. To determine thermodynamic parameters of helix-coil transition from DSC profiles for this peptide, we developed a new, semiempirical procedure based on the calculated function for the heat capacity of the coiled state for a broad temperature range. The application of this approach to the partial molar heat capacity function for MEARA(6) provides the enthalpy change for helix formation calculated per amino acid residue as 3.5 kJ/mol.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The effect of hexafluoroacetone hydrate (HFA) on the structure of the honey bee venom peptide melittin has been investigated. In aqueous solution at low pH melittin is predominantly unstructured. Addition of HFA at pH approximately 2.0 induces a structural transition from the unstructured state to a predominantly helical conformation as suggested by intense diagnostic far UV CD bands. The structural transition is highly cooperative and complete at 3.6 M (50% v/v) HFA. A similar structural transition is also observed in 2,2,2 trifluoroethanol which is complete only at a cosolvent concentration of approximately 8 M. Temperature dependent CD experiments support a 'cold denaturation' of melittin at low concentrations of HFA, suggesting that selective solvation of peptide by HFA is mediated by hydrophobic interactions. NMR studies in 3.6 M HFA establish a well-defined helical structure of melittin at low pH, as suggested by the presence of strong NH/NHi+1 NOEs throughout the sequence, along with many medium range helical NOEs. Structure calculations using NOE-driven distance constraints reveal a well-ordered helical fold with a relatively flexible segment around residues T10-G11-T12. The helical structure of melittin obtained at 3.6 M HFA at low pH is similar to those determined in methanolic solution and perdeuterated dodecylphosphocholine micelles. HFA as a cosolvent facilitates helix formation even in the highly charged C-terminal segment.  相似文献   

11.
The structure and self‐assembly of the peptide corresponding to the third transmembrane domain (TMD3) of Slc11a1 and its E139A mutant are studied in 1,1,1,3,3,3‐hexafluoro‐2‐propanol (HFIP) aqueous solution by NMR and CD experiments. Slc11a1 is an integral membrane protein with 12 putative TMDs and functions as a pH‐coupled divalent metal cation transporter. Glu139 of Slc11a1 is highly conserved within predicted TMD3 of the Slc11 protein family and function‐associated. Here, we provide the first direct experimental evidence for the structural features of two 24‐residue peptides corresponding to TMD3 of Slc11a1 and its E139A mutant in 60% HFIP‐d2 aqueous solution using CD and NMR spectroscopies. Our study shows that the membrane‐spanning peptide folds as a typical amphipathic α‐helix structure from Ile5 to Met20 with hydrophilic residues Glu12 (Glu139 in Slc11a1) and Asp19 lying on the same side of the helix. The substitution of Glu139 by an alanine residue has little effect on the structure of the peptide, but increases hydrophobicity and facilitates self‐assembly of the peptide. Although the wildtype peptide is monomeric in HFIP aqueous solution, the E139A mutant forms a dimer. The increase in hydrophobicity of the membrane‐spanning peptide and/or change in the interactions between transmembrane segments induced by E139A mutation may affect the metal ion transport of the protein. Copyright © 2010 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

12.
An ultimate goal of synthetic ion-channel peptide design is to construct stable and functional ion-conducting pores. It is expected that specific interhelical interactions would facilitate the association of helices in phospholipid membranes and the successive helix-bundle formation. In the present study, we rationally designed helix-bundle ion channels using the synthetic hybrid peptide K20E20, a disulfide dimer of cationic- and anionic-amphiphilic helices Ac-CGG-(BKBA) 5-NH 2 and Ac-CGG-(BEBA) 5-NH 2. Circular dichroism (CD) measurements in aqueous media implied helix stabilization in the peptide caused by the interhelical electrostatic interactions. In addition, CD spectra recorded in the presence of DPPC liposomes and dye-leakage measurements suggested a high degree of association of peptide monomers in phospholipid membranes as well as high affinities between peptide and lipid bilayers. These features allowed ion-channel formation at extremely low peptide concentrations (as low as 1 nM). According to electrophysiological analyses, stable helix bundles were constructed of six peptide helices by association of three K20E20 molecules. Helix-helix association in lipid membranes, peptide-membrane interactions, and ion-channel formation of K20E20 peptides were all facilitated by intramolecular electrostatic interactions between the helices of the hybrid peptide and were pH-dependent. Conductance through K20E20 ion channels decreased under acidic conditions because of the interruption of the salt bridges.  相似文献   

13.
D S Ferran  M Sobel  R B Harris 《Biochemistry》1992,31(21):5010-5016
Elaboration of heparin-protein-binding interactions is necessary to understand how heparin modulates protein function. The heparin-binding domain of some proteins is postulated to be a helix structure which presents a surface of high positive charge density. Thus, a synthetic 19-residue peptide designed to be alpha-helical in character was synthesized, and its interaction with heparin was studied. The peptide was shown to be 75% helix by circular dichroism (CD) spectrometry in neutral pH buffer (at 2 degrees C); helicity increased to nearly 85% under high ionic strength conditions or to nearly 100% in 75% ethanol. Increasing the temperature of the solution caused a change in the spectral envelope consistent with a coil transition of the peptide. The midpoint of the transition (i.e., the temperature at which the helix content was determined to be 50%) was 25 degrees C, and the determined van't Hoff enthalpy change (delta HvH) was 3.2 kcal/mol of peptide. By CD, heparin increases the helix content of the peptide to 100% and increases the apparent thermal stability of the peptide by about 1 kcal/mol. The melting point for the helix/coil transition of the heparin-peptide complex was 50 degrees C. The thermal coefficient of the transition (approximately 300 deg.cm2.dmol-1.degree C-1) was essentially the same for the peptide alone or the peptide-heparin complex. Dissociation of the complex under high ionic strength conditions was also observed in the CD experiment. Biological assays showed less heparin-binding activity than expected (micromolar KD values), but this was attributed to the absence of critical lysyl residues in the peptide.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Amyloid beta (Abeta) peptides are one of the classes of amphiphilic molecules that on dissolution in aqueous solvents undergo interesting conformational transitions. These conformational changes are known to be associated with their neuronal toxicity. The mechanism of structural transition involved in the monomeric Abeta to toxic assemblage is yet to be understood at the molecular level. Early results indicate that oriented molecular crowding has a profound effect on their assemblage formation. In this work, we have studied how different microenvironments affect the conformational transitions of one of the active amyloid beta-peptide fragments (Abeta(25-35)). Spectroscopic techniques such as CD and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy were used. It was observed that a stored peptide concentrates on dissolution in methanol adopts a minor alpha-helical conformation along with unordered structures. On changing the methanol concentration in the solvated film form, the conformation switches to the antiparallel beta-sheet structure on the hydrophilic surface, whereas the peptide shows transition from a mixture of helix and unordered structure into predominantly a beta-sheet with minor contribution of helix structure on the hydrophobic surface. Our present investigations indicate that the conformations induced by the different surfaces dictate the gross conformational preference of the peptide concentrate.  相似文献   

15.
There has been much interest recently in the structure of small peptides in solution. A recent study by Bradley and co-workers [(1989) in Techniques of Protein Chemistry, Hugli, T.E., Ed., Academic Press, Orlando, FL, pp. 531-546; (1990) Journal of Molecular Biology, 215, pp. 607-622] describes a 17-residue peptide that is stable as a monomeric helix in aqueous solution at low pH, as determined by two-dimensional nmr and CD spectroscopy. They also have determined the helix content of the peptide as a function of pH using CD. We performed molecular dynamics simulations, with an empirical force field, of this peptide at low pH, with three different dielectric models: a linear distance-dependent dielectric function (epsilon = R); a modified form [J. Ramstein and R. Lavery (1988) Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, USA, Vol. 85, pp. 7231-7235] of the sigmoidal distance-dependent dielectric function of Hingerty and co-workers [(1985) Biopolymers, Vol. 24, pp. 427-439]; and epsilon = 1 with the peptide immersed in a bath of water molecules. We found that simulations with the sigmoidal dielectric function and the model with explicit water molecules resulted in average distances for particular interactions that were consistent with the experimental nmr results, with the sigmoidal function best representing the data. However, these models exhibited very different helix-stabilizing interactions. We also performed simulations using the sigmoidal function at moderate and high pH to compare to experimental determinations of the pH dependence of helix content. Helix content did not decrease with increases in pH, as shown experimentally. We did, however, observe changes in a specific side chain-helix dipole interaction that was implicated in determining the pH-dependent behavior of this peptide. Overall, the sigmoidal dielectric function was a reasonable alternative to adding explicit water molecules. In comparing 100 ps molecular dynamics simulations, the sigmoidal function was much less computer intensive and sampled more of conformational space than the treatment using explicit water molecules. Sampling is especially important for this system since the peptide has been shown experimentally to populate both helical and nonhelical conformations.  相似文献   

16.
Previous studies on mitochondrial targeting presequences have indicated that formation of an amphiphillic helix may be required for efficient targeting of the precursor protein into mitochondria, but the structural details are not well understood. We have used CD and NMR spectroscopy to characterize in detail the structure of a synthetic peptide corresponding to the presequence for the beta-subunit of F1-ATPase, a mitochondrial matrix protein. Although this peptide is essentially unstructured in water, alpha-helix formation is induced when the peptide is placed in structure-promoting environments, such as SDS micelles or aqueous trifluoroethanol (TFE). In 50% TFE (by volume), the peptide is in dynamic equilibrium between random coil and alpha-helical conformations, with a significant population of alpha-helix throughout the entire peptide. The helix is somewhat more stable in the N-terminal part of the presequence (residues 4-10), and this result is consistent with the structure proposed previously for the presequence of another mitochondrial matrix protein, yeast cytochrome oxidase subunit IV. Addition of increasing amounts of TFE causes the alpha-helical content to increase even further, and the TFE titration data for the presequence peptide of the F1-ATPase beta-subunit are not consistent with a single, cooperative transition from random coil to alpha-helix. There is evidence that helix formation is initiated in two different regions of the peptide. This result helps to explain the redundancy of the targeting information contained in the presequence for the F1-ATPase beta-subunit.  相似文献   

17.
Molten globules are partially folded states of proteins which are generally believed to mimic structures formed during the folding process. In order to determine the minimal requirements for the formation of a molten globule state, we have prepared a set of peptide models of the molten globule state of human alpha-lactalbumin (alphaLA). A peptide consisting of residues 1-38 crosslinked, via the native 28-111 disulfide bond, to a peptide corresponding to residues 95-120 forms a partially folded state at pH 2.8 which has all of the characteristics of the molten globule state of alphaLA as judged by near and far UV CD, fluorescence, ANS binding and urea denaturation experiments. The structure of the peptide construct is the same at pH 7.0. Deletion of residues 95-100 from the construct has little effect. Thus, less than half the sequence is required to form a molten globule. Further truncation corresponding to the selective deletion of the A (residues 1-19) or D (residues 101-110) helices or the C-terminal 310 helix (residues 112-120) leads to a significant loss of structure. The loss of structure which results from the deletion of any of these three regions is much greater than that which would be expected based upon the non-cooperative loss of local helical structure. Deletion of residues corresponding to the region of the D helix or C-terminal 310 helix region results in a peptide construct which is largely unfolded and contains no more helical structure than is expected from the sum of the helicity of the two reduced peptides. These experiments have defined the minimum core structure of the alphaLA molten globule state.  相似文献   

18.
A single aspartate residue has been placed at various positions in individual peptides for which the alanine-based reference peptide is electrically neutral, and the helix contents of the peptides have been measured by circular dichroism. The dependence of peptide helix content on aspartate position has been used to determine the helix propensity (s-value). Both the charged (Asp-) and uncharged (Asp0) forms of the aspartate residue are strong helix breakers and have identical s-values of 0.29 at 0 degree C. The interaction of Asp- with the helix dipole affects helix stability at positions throughout the helix, not only near the N-terminus, where the interaction is helix stabilizing, and the C-terminus, where it is destabilizing. Comparison of the helix contents at acidic pH (Asp0) and at neutral pH (Asp-) shows that the charge-helix dipole interaction is screened slowly with increasing NaCl concentration, and screening is not complete even at 4.8 M NaCl. Lastly, a helix-stabilizing hydrogen-bond interaction between glutamine and aspartate (spacing i, i + 4) has been found. This side-chain interaction is specific for both the orientation and spacing of the glutamine and aspartate residues and is resistant to screening by NaCl.  相似文献   

19.
The CD of glucagon, secretin, and vasoactive intestinal peptide has been studied as a function of temperature in water and in aqueous solutions of dodecyl sulfate, phosphatidyl glycerol, and L -α-phosphatidic acid (dipalmitoyl). The anionic detergent and lipids induce helix formation in all three peptides, with the amount of induced helical content increasing in the order glucagon < secretin < vasoactive intestinal peptide. These observations are subject to quantitative rationalization using a matrix formulation for the configuration partition function. In this formulation the major conformational consequences of the interaction with anionic lipids or detergents is an increase in the probability for helix formation by arginyl, histidyl, and lysyl residues. The region in which helix formation is maximal is found to be at amino acid residues 13–20 in all three peptides. Other studies have implicated this portion of the polypeptide chain in receptor binding. Thus, the helical segment induced by interaction with anionic lipids may play an important physiological role.  相似文献   

20.
Two 500-ps molecular dynamics simulations performed on the single transmembrane domain of the ErbB-2 tyrosine kinase receptor immersed in a fully solvated dilauroylphosphatidyl-ethanolamine bilayer (DLPE) are compared to vacuum simulations. One membrane simulation shows that the initial alpha helix undergoes a local pi helix conversion in the peptide part embedded in the membrane core similar to that found in simulation vacuum. Lipid/water/peptide interaction analysis shows that in the helix core, the intramolecular peptide interactions are largely dominant compared to the interactions with water and lipids whereas the helix extremities are much more sensitive to these interactions at the membrane interfaces. Our results suggest that simulations in a lipid environment are required to understand the dynamics of transmembrane helices, but can be reasonably supplemented by in vacuo simulations to explore rapidly its conformational space and to describe the internal deformation of the hydrophobic core.  相似文献   

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