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1.
Zhang X  Adda CG  Low A  Zhang J  Zhang W  Sun H  Tu X  Anders RF  Norton RS 《Biochemistry》2012,51(7):1380-1387
Merozoite surface protein 2 (MSP2), an abundant glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein on the surface of Plasmodium falciparum merozoites, is a promising malaria vaccine candidate. MSP2 is intrinsically disordered and forms amyloid-like fibrils in solution under physiological conditions. The 25 N-terminal residues (MSP2(1-25)) play an important role in both fibril formation and membrane binding of the full-length protein. In this study, the fibril formation and solution structure of MSP2(1-25) in the membrane mimetic solvents sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), dodecylphosphocholine (DPC), and trifluoroethanol (TFE) have been investigated by transmission electronic microscopy, turbidity, thioflavin T fluorescence, circular dichroism (CD), and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Turbidity data showed that the aggregation of MSP2(1-25) was suppressed in the presence of membrane mimetic solvents. CD spectra indicated that helical structure in MSP2(1-25) was stabilized in SDS and DPC micelles and in high concentrations of TFE. The structure of MSP2(1-25) in 50% aqueous TFE, determined using NMR, showed that the peptide formed an amphipathic helix encompassing residues 10-24. Low concentrations of TFE favored partially folded helical conformations, as demonstrated by CD and NMR, and promoted MSP2(1-25) fibril formation. Our data suggest that partially folded helical conformations of the N-terminal region of MSP2 are on the pathway to amyloid fibril formation, while higher degrees of helical structure stabilized by high concentrations of TFE or membrane mimetics suppress self-association and thus inhibit fibril formation. The roles of the induced helical conformations in membrane interactions are also discussed.  相似文献   

2.
In an attempt to characterize the early folding events in bovine beta-lactoglobulin (BLG), a set of peptides, covering the flexible N-terminal region and the stable C-terminus beta-core, was synthesized and analyzed by circular dichroism and by nuclear magnetic resonance in water, trifluoroethanol (TFE), and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) below and above the critical micellar concentration. The role of local and long-range hydrophobic interactions in guiding the folding has been investigated. For the peptide fragment covering the more flexible N-terminal region of BLG (beta-strands A, B), where both theoretical predictions and kinetic refolding experiments suggested the formation of non-native alpha-helix, no native long-range contacts were identified, and a helical secondary structure was stabilized only in the presence of 25 mM SDS. At variance, in 50% (v/v) TFE, native, long-range hydrophobic interactions were observed in the peptide covering the core region comprising G and H beta-strands. The side chains involved in these interactions form a nativelike hydrophobic cluster, thus suggesting that the GH region may act as the folding initiation site for BLG. This result is reinforced by the identification, in the urea denaturated BLG, of residual structure located at the level of the GH interface, as evidenced by NMR analysis. These results, in excellent agreement with kinetic, thermodynamic, and cold denaturation folding data, once more underline the utmost importance of the GH region for the stability and folding of BLG. Severe aggregation effects prevented the structural analysis of the peptide covering the EFGH region, indicating that this larger segment does not represent an independent folding domain and that the terminal alpha-helix is necessary for stabilizing the BLG folding core.  相似文献   

3.
EmrE, a multidrug resistance protein from Escherichia coli, renders the bacterium resistant to a variety of cytotoxic drugs by active translocation out of the cell. The 110-residue sequence of EmrE limits the number of structural possibilities that can be envisioned for this membrane protein. Four helix bundle models have been considered [Yerushalmi, H., Lebendiker, M., and Schuldiner, S. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 31044-31048]. The validity of EmrE structural models has been probed experimentally by investigations on overlapping peptides (ranging in length from 19 to 27 residues), derived from the sequence of EmrE. The choice of peptides was made to provide sequences of two complete, predicted transmembrane helices (peptides H1 and H3) and two helix-loop-helix motifs (peptides A and B). Peptide (B) also corresponds to a putative hairpin in a speculative beta-barrel model, with the "Pro-Thr-Gly" segment forming a turn. Structure determination in SDS micelles using NMR indicates peptide H1 to be predominantly helical, with helix boundaries in the micellar environment corroborating predicted helical limits. Peptide A adopts a helix-loop-helix structure in SDS micelles, and peptide B was also largely helical in micellar environments. An analogue peptide, C, in which the central "Pro-Thr-Gly" was replaced by "(D)Pro-Gly" displays local turn conformation at the (D)Pro-Gly segment, but neither a continuous helical stretch nor beta-hairpin formation was observed. This study implies that the constraints of membrane and micellar environments largely direct the structure of transmembrane peptides and proteins and study of judiciously selected peptide fragments can prove useful in the structural elucidation of membrane proteins.  相似文献   

4.
The dermaseptins S are closely related peptides with broad-spectrum antibacterial activity that are produced by the skin of the South American hylid frog, Phyllomedusa sauvagei. These peptides are polycationic (Lys-rich), alpha-helical, and amphipathic, with their polar/charged and apolar amino acids on opposing faces along the long axis of the helix cylinder. The amphipathic alpha-helical structure is believed to enable the peptides to interact with membrane bilayers, leading to permeation and disruption of the target cell. We have identified new members of the dermaseptin S family that do not resemble any of the naturally occurring antimicrobial peptides characterized to date. One of these peptides, designated dermaseptin S9, GLRSKIWLWVLLMIWQESNKFKKM, has a tripartite structure that includes a hydrophobic core sequence encompassing residues 6-15 (mean hydrophobicity, +4.40, determined by the Liu-Deber scale) flanked at both termini by cationic and polar residues. This structure is reminiscent of that of synthetic peptides originally designed as transmembrane mimetic models and that spontaneously become inserted into membranes [Liu, L., and Deber, C. M. (1998) Biopolymers 47, 41-62]. Dermaseptin S9 is a potent antibacterial, acting on gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. The structure of dermaseptin S9 in aqueous solution and in TFE/water mixtures was analyzed by circular dichroism and two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy combined with molecular dynamics calculations. Dermaseptin S9 is aggregated in water, but a monomeric nonamphipathic alpha-helical conformation, mostly in residues 6-21, is stabilized by the addition of TFE. These results, combined with membrane permeabilization assays and surface plasmon resonance analysis of the peptide binding to zwitterionic and anionic phospholipid bilayers, demonstrate that spatial segregation of hydrophobic and hydrophilic/charged residues on opposing faces along the long axis of a helix is not essential for the antimicrobial activity of cationic alpha-helical peptides.  相似文献   

5.
Booth V  Waring AJ  Walther FJ  Keough KM 《Biochemistry》2004,43(48):15187-15194
Although the membrane-associated surfactant protein B (SP-B) is an essential component of lung surfactant, which is itself essential for life, the molecular basis for its activity is not understood. SP-B's biophysical functions can be partially mimicked by subfragments of the protein, including the C-terminus. We have used NMR to determine the structure of a C-terminal fragment of human SP-B that includes residues 63-78. Structure determination was performed both in the fluorinated alcohol hexafluoro-2-propanol (HFIP) and in sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles. In both solvents, residues 68-78 take on an amphipathic helical structure, in agreement with predictions made by comparison to homologous saposin family proteins. In HFIP, the five N-terminal residues of the peptide are largely unstructured, while in SDS micelles, these residues take on a well-defined compact conformation. Differences in helical residue side chain positioning between the two solvents were also found, with better agreement between the structures for the hydrophobic face than the hydrophilic face. A paramagnetic probe was used to investigate the position of the peptide within the SDS micelles and indicated that the peptide is located at the water interface with the hydrophobic face of the helix oriented inward, the hydrophilic face of the helix oriented outward, and the N-terminal residues even farther from the micelle center than those on the hydrophilic face of the alpha-helix. Interactions of basic residues of SP-B with anionic lipid headgroups are known to have an impact on function, and these studies demonstrate structural ramifications of such interactions via the differences observed between the peptide structures determined in HFIP and SDS.  相似文献   

6.
The structure of "B18", an 18-residue fusogenic peptide from the sea urchin fertilization protein bindin, was investigated in several membrane-mimicking environments with circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The fully conserved peptide sequence represents the minimal functional part of the 24 kDa protein, which can bind to membranes and induce fusion of lipid vesicles. The B18 peptide undergoes a coil-helix transition in the presence of TFE, showing a transient tendency to self-associate. Its NMR structure in 30% TFE exhibits two helical regions at either side, connected by a flexible loop. In DPC and SDS detergent micelles, this loop becomes distinctly bent, presumably due to the high degree of curvature of the micelles. The loop contains a histidine-rich motif for binding zinc, which is required for the fusogenic function of the peptide. Therefore, we monitored the structural response of B18 and of recombinant bindin toward this ion. Like TFE, and in a mutually cooperative manner, zinc induces a partially helical structure in both the peptide and the protein. Complex formation via the histidine residues rigidifies the flexible loop and is accompanied by self-association of the molecules. The data suggest that the zinc-bound functional state is a continuous amphipathic alpha-helix, bearing some resemblance to a leucine zipper. Two hydrophobic patches on one face could favorably penetrate into a membrane, while two arginines on the other face could interact with lipid phosphate groups. The three-dimensional model of the B18 sequence thus contributes to a better understanding of peptide-induced vesicle fusion in general, and of the lipid-protein interactions of sperm bindin in particular.  相似文献   

7.
A 34-residue antimicrobial peptide named dermaseptin was purified to homogeneity from amphibian skin by a 3-step protocol involving molecular sieve filtration, ion-exchange chromatography, and reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. The complete amino acid sequence of dermaseptin, ALWKTMLKKLGTMALHAGKAALGAAADTISQGTQ, was determined by automated Edman degradation of the peptide and of fragments generated by trypsin. Fast atom bombardment mass spectra of dermaseptin gave a protonated molecular ion m/z 3455.4 which matched the theoretical molecular weight predicted from the amino acid sequence. Dermaseptin was synthesized by the solid-phase method. The synthetic replicate was shown to be indistinguishable from natural dermaseptin with respect to chromatographic properties, amino acid sequence determination, and mass spectrometry analysis. Dermaseptin is a water-soluble, thermostable, and nonhemolytic peptide endowed with highly potent antimicrobial activity against pathogenic fungi at micromolar concentration. Circular dichroism spectra of dermaseptin in hydrophobic media indicated 80% alpha-helical conformation, and predictions of secondary structure suggested that dermaseptin can be configured as an amphiphatic alpha-helix spanning over residues 1-27, a structure that perturbs membrane functions regulating water flux.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Conformational preferences of secretin as a model peptide have been analyzed by CD and IR spectroscopy in reverse micelles of AOT/isooctane/water and compared to those in aqueous TFE, in SDS micelles and in DMPG vesicles. Among the systems examined, reverse micelles and phospholipid vesicles displayed almost identical conformational equilibria. Very high lipid-to-peptide ratios can be obtained in reverse micelles with full retention of optical transparency, even at millimolar peptide concentrations, thus indicating this system to be an interesting mimic of cell membrane environments for spectroscopic analysis of bioactive peptide conformations.Abbreviations TFE trifluoroethanol - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - DMPG dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol - AOT bis(2-ethylhexyl)sulfosuccinate - CMC critical micellar concentration - VIP vasoactive intestinal peptide  相似文献   

9.
The preferred conformation of Proadrenomedullin N-Terminal 20 Peptide (PAMP; ARLDVASEFRKKWNKWALSR-amide) has been determined using 1H and 13C two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and molecular modeling. PAMP is a peptide that has various physiological functions, including its role as a proangiogenic factor in facilitating tumor growth and its inhibitory effect on catecholamine secretion at nicotinic receptors. The preferred conformation of PAMP was determined in a helix-inducing trifluoroethanol and water (TFE/H2O) solution, and in a membrane-mimetic sodium dodecylsulfate-d25 (SDS) micellar solution. The secondary structure consists of an alpha-helix for residues Arg2 to Arg20 in TFE/H2O solution and an alpha-helix for residues Arg2 to Ala17 in SDS solution. We postulate that the polar charged residues Arg2, Lys12, and Arg20 are responsible for the initial interaction of the peptide with the micelle, and that this is followed by the binding of the hydrophobic residues Leu3, Val5, Phe9, Trp13, and Trp16 to the micellar core. The three C-terminal amino acid residues adopt an extended structure in SDS, suggesting that they are important in receptor recognition and binding. This is supported by truncation studies done by Mahata et al. (Hypertension, 1998, Vol. 32, pp. 907-916), which show the importance of the C-terminal in physiological activity. Furthermore, Belloni et al. (Hypertension, 1999, Vol. 33, pp. 1185-1189), and Martinez et al. (Cancer Research, 2004, Vol. 64, pp. 6489-6494) suggested that the N-terminal was also important in PAMP activity. However, no differences in conformational preference of the N-terminal were observed between the two solvent systems.  相似文献   

10.
The CD spectra of SMAP-29, an antimicrobial peptide from sheep, showed disordered structure in aqueous buffers, and significant helicity in membrane-like environments, including SDS micelles, lipopolysaccharide (LPS) dispersions, and trifluoroethanol buffer systems. A structure determined by NMR in 40% perdeuterated trifluoroethanol indicated that residues 8-17 were helical, residues 18-19 formed a hinge, and residues 20-28 formed an ordered, hydrophobic segment. SMAP-29 was flexible in 40% trifluoroethanol, forming two sets of conformers that differed in the relative orientation of the N-terminal domain. We used a chromogenic Limulus assay to determine the EC50 of the peptide (the concentration that bound 50% of the added LPS). Studies with full-length and truncated SMAP-29 molecules revealed that each end of the holopeptide contained an LPS-binding domain. The higher affinity LPS-binding domain was situated in the flexible N-terminal portion. LPS binding to full-length SMAP-29 showed positive cooperativity, so the EC50 of the peptide (2.6 microm) was considerably lower than that of the individual LPS-binding domains. LPS-binding studies with a mixture of truncated peptides revealed that this cooperativity was primarily intramolecular (i.e. involving the N- and C-terminal LPS-binding sites of the same peptide molecule). CAP-18[106 -142], an antimicrobial cathelicidin peptide of rabbits, resembled SMAP-29 in that it contained N- and C-terminal LPS-binding domains, had an EC50 of 2.5 microm, and bound LPS with positive cooperativity. We conclude that the presence of multiple binding sites that function cooperatively allow peptides such as SMAP-29 and CAP-18 to bind LPS with high affinity.  相似文献   

11.
A 20-residue peptide E5 containing five glutamates, an analog of the fusion peptide of influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) exhibiting fusion activity at acidic pH lower than 6.0-6.5 was studied by circular dichroism (CD), Fourier transform infrared, and 1H-NMR spectroscopy in water, water/trifluoroethanol (TFE) mixtures, dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) micelles, and phospholipid vesicles. E5 became structurally ordered at pH < or = 6 and the helical content in the peptide increased in the row: water < water/TFE < DPC approximately = phospholipid vesicle while the amount of beta-structure was approximately reverse. 1H-NMR data and line-broadening effect of 5-, 16-doxylstearates on proton resonances of DPC bound peptide showed E5 forms amphiphilic alpha-helix in residues 2-18, which is flexible in 11-18 part. The analysis of the proton chemical shifts of DPC bound and CD intensity at 220 nm of phospholipid bound E5 showed that the pH dependence of helical content is characterized by the same pKa approximately 5.6. Only Glu11 and Glu15 in DPC bound peptide showed such elevated pKas, presumably due to transient hydrogen bond(s) Glu11 (Glu15) deltaCOO- (H+)...HN Glu15 that dispose(s) the side chain of Glu11 (Glu15) residue(s) close to the micelle/water interface. These glutamates are present in the HA-fusion peptide and the experimental half-maximal pH of fusion for HA and E5 peptides is approximately 5.6. Therefore, a specific anchorage of these peptides onto membrane necessary for fusion is likely driven by the protonation of the carboxylate group of Glu11 (Glu15) residue(s) participating in transient hydrogen bond(s).  相似文献   

12.
Yan C  Digate RJ  Guiles RD 《Biopolymers》1999,49(1):55-70
Structural and dynamic properties of opioid peptide E have been examined in an sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelle. Structural and dynamic studies both indicate that this peptide exhibits greater segmental mobility than typical structured proteins. An nmr structural analysis of adrenal peptide E in SDS micelles indicated the presence of two well-defined beta-turns, one at the N-terminus encompassing residues 3 to 6, and the second in the region between residues 15 and 18. Certain side chain dihedral angles were also remarkably well defined, such as the chi 1 angle of F4, which exhibited a trans configuration. These calculated structures were based on a set of 9.5 restraints per residue. The backbone dynamics of peptide E in SDS micelles were examined through an analysis of 15N-relaxation parameters. An extended model-free analysis was used to interpret the relaxation data. The overall rotational correlation time is 19.7 ns. the average order parameter S2 is 0.66 +/- 0.15. The N-terminal loop region residues including G3 to R6 have an average order parameter of 0.70 +/- 0.23. The average order parameter lies somewhere between that observed for a random coil (e.g., S2 = 0.3) and that of a well-defined tertiary fold (e.g., S2 = 0.86). This suggests that peptide E in SDS micelles adopts a restricted range of conformations rather than a random coil. Based on the helical structure recently obtained for the highly homologous kappa-agonist dynorphin-A(1-17) and the beta-turn in the same region of peptide E, it is reasonable to assume that these two elements of secondary structure reflect different receptor subtype binding geometries. The intermediate order parameters observed for peptide E in an SDS micelle suggest a degree of dynamic mobility that may enable facile interconversion between helical and beta-turn geometries in the N-terminal agonist domain.  相似文献   

13.
The three-dimensional structures of the two peptides, lactococcin G-alpha (LcnG-alpha; contains 39 residues) and lactococcin G-beta (LcnG-beta, contains 35 residues), that constitute the two-peptide bacteriocin lactococcin G (LcnG) have been determined by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy in the presence of DPC micelles and TFE. In DPC, LcnG-alpha has an N-terminal alpha-helix (residues 3-21) that contains a GxxxG helix-helix interaction motif (residues 7-11) and a less well defined C-terminal alpha-helix (residues 24-34), and in between (residues 18-22) there is a second somewhat flexible GxxxG-motif. Its structure in TFE was similar. In DPC, LcnG-beta has an N-terminal alpha-helix (residues 6-19). The region from residues 20 to 35, which also contains a flexible GxxxG-motif (residues 18-22), appeared to be fairly unstructured in DPC. In the presence of TFE, however, the region between and including residues 23 and 32 formed a well defined alpha-helix. The N-terminal helix between and including residues 6 and 19 seen in the presence of DPC, was broken at residues 8 and 9 in the presence of TFE. The N-terminal helices, both in LcnG-alpha and -beta, are amphiphilic. We postulate that LcnG-alpha and -beta have a parallel orientation and interact through helix-helix interactions involving the first GxxxG (residues 7-11) motif in LcnG-alpha and the one (residues 18-22) in LcnG-beta, and that they thus lie in a staggered fashion relative to each other.  相似文献   

14.
Entry of enveloped animal viruses into their host cells always depends on a step of membrane fusion triggered by conformational changes in viral envelope glycoproteins. Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) infection is mediated by virus spike glycoprotein G, which induces membrane fusion at the acidic environment of the endosomal compartment. In a previous work, we identified a specific sequence in the VSV G protein, comprising the residues 145-164, directly involved in membrane interaction and fusion. In the present work we studied the interaction of pep[145-164] with membranes using NMR to solve the structure of the peptide in two membrane-mimetic systems: SDS micelles and liposomes composed of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine (PC:PS vesicles). The presence of medium-range NOEs showed that the peptide has a tendency to form N- and C-terminal helical segments in the presence of SDS micelles. Analysis of the chemical shift index indicated helix-coil equilibrium for the C-terminal helix under all conditions studied. At pH 7.0, the N-terminal helix also displayed a helix-coil equilibrium when pep[145-164] was free in solution or in the presence of PC:PS. Remarkably, at the fusogenic pH, the region of the N-terminal helix in the presence of SDS or PC:PS presented a third conformational species that was in equilibrium with the helix and random coil. The N-terminal helix content decreases pH and the minor beta-structured conformation becomes more prevalent at the fusogenic pH. These data point to a beta-conformation as the fusogenic active structure-which is in agreement with the X-ray structure, which shows a beta-hairpin for the region corresponding to pep[145-164].  相似文献   

15.
S Lee  Y Kim 《FEBS letters》1999,460(2):263-269
The solution structure of neuromedin B (NMB) was investigated using two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy in membrane-mimicking environments. NMB adopts a relaxed helical conformation from Trp(4) to Met(10) in 50% aqueous 2,2, 2-trifluoroethanol (TFE) solution and in 150 mM SDS micelles. Sidechain atoms of the three residues, Trp(4), His(8) and Phe(9) orient toward the same direction and these residues might play a key role on interacting with hydrophobic acyl chains of the phospholipids in the membrane. NOESY experiments performed on NMB in non-deuterated SDS micelle show that aromatic ring protons of Trp(4) and Phe(9) residues are in close contact with methylene protons of SDS micelles. In addition, proton longitudinal relaxation data proved that the interactions between NMB with SDS micelle are characterized as extrinsic interaction. Trp(4) and Phe(9) seem to be important in interaction with receptor and this agrees with the previous studies of structure-activity relationship (Howell, D.C. et al. (1996) Int. J. Pept. Protein Res. 48, 522-531). These conformational features might be helpful in understanding the molecular mechanism of the function of NMB and developing the efficient drugs.  相似文献   

16.
A 14 amino acid residue peptide from the helical region of Scorpion neurotoxin has been structurally characterized using CD and NMR spectroscopy in different solvent conditions. 2,2,2-Trifluoroethanol (TFE) titration has been carried out in 11 steps from 0 to 90% TFE and the gradual stabilization of the conformation to form predominantly alpha-helix covering all of the 14 residues has been studied by 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy. Detailed information such as coupling constants, chemical shift indices, NOESY peak intensities and amide proton temperature coefficients at each TFE concentration has been extracted and analysed to derive the step-wise preferential stabilization of the helical segments along the length of the peptide. It was found that there is a finite amount of the helical conformation in the middle residues 5-11 even at low TFE concentrations. It was also observed that > 75% TFE (v/v) is required for the propagation of the helix to the N and C termini and for correct packing of the side chains of all of the residues. These observations are significant to understanding the folding of this segment in the protein and may throw light on the inherent preferences and side chain interactions in the formation of the helix in the peptide.  相似文献   

17.
The structure of a synthetic peptide comprising the 28 amino-terminal residues of actin has been examined by 1H-NMR and CD spectroscopy. The peptide is largely unstructured and flexible in solution but becomes increasingly structured at higher trifluoroethanol (TFE) concentrations. As judged by CD with the use of two additional peptides (actin 1-20 and actin 18-28), TFE induces formation of up to 48% helical content within residues 1-20, while residues 21-28 exhibit no helical propensity. Similar results were obtained by using NMR-derived distance information in restrained molecular dynamics calculations. The calculated structure of actin 1-28 peptide in 80% TFE is well defined for the first 23 residues with a backbone root mean square deviation of 0.5 A. Two helices are formed from residues 4-13 and 16-20, and a beta-turn is formed from residues 13-16. The N-terminal residues 1-3 exhibit increased flexibility and a helix-like conformation while the C-terminal residues 21-28 show no regular secondary structure. These results are compared with the predicted secondary structure and the structure of the corresponding sequence in the crystal structure of actin [Kabsch et al. (1990) Nature 347, 37-44]. The significance of the TFE-induced peptide structure is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
In current topological models, the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase contains 10 putative transmembrane spans (M1-M10), with spans M4/M5/M6 and probably M8 participating in the formation of the membranous calcium-binding sites. We describe here the conformational properties of a synthetic peptide fragment (E785-N810) encompassing the sixth transmembrane span (M6) of Ca2+-ATPase. Peptide M6 includes three residues (N796, T799, and D800) out of the six membranous residues critically involved in the ATPase calcium-binding sites. 2D-NMR experiments were performed on the M6 peptide selectively labeled with 15N and solubilized in dodecylphosphocholine micelles to mimic a membrane-like environment. Under these conditions, M6 adopts a helical structure in its N-terminal part, between residues I788 and T799, while its C-terminal part (G801-N810) remains disordered. Addition of 20% trifluoroethanol stabilizes the alpha-helical N-terminal segment of the peptide, and reveals the propensity of the C-terminal segment (G801-L807) to form also a helix. This second helix is located at the interface or in the aqueous environment outside the micelles, while the N-terminal helix is buried in the hydrophobic core of the micelles. Furthermore, the two helical segments of M6 are linked by a flexible hinge region containing residues T799 and D800. These conformational features may be related to the transient formation of a Schellman motif (L797VTDGL802) encoded in the M6 sequence, which probably acts as a C-cap of the N-terminal helix and induces a bend with respect to the helix axis. We propose a model illustrating two conformations of M6 and its insertion in the membrane. The presence of a flexible region within M6 would greatly facilitate concomitant participation of all three residues (N796, T799, and D800) believed to be involved in calcium complexation.  相似文献   

19.
S Mammi  E Peggion 《Biochemistry》1990,29(22):5265-5269
Human little gastrin is a 17 amino acid peptide that adopts a random conformation in water and an ordered structure in sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles as well as in trifluoroethanol (TFE). The circular dichroism spectra in these two media have the same shape, indicative of a similar preferred conformation [Mammi, S., Mammi, N. J., Foffani, M. T., Peggion, E., Moroder, L., & Wünsch, E. (1987) Biopolymers 26, S1-S10]. We describe here the assignment of the proton NMR resonances and the conformational analysis of [Ahx15]little gastrin in SDS micelles. Two-dimensional correlation techniques form the basis for the assignment. The conformational analysis utilized NOE's, NH to C alpha H coupling constants, and the temperature coefficients of the amide chemical shifts. The NMR data indicate a helical structure in the N-terminal portion of the peptide. These results are compared with the conformation that we recently proposed for a minigastrin analogue (fragment 5-17 of [Ahx15]little gastrin) in TFE.  相似文献   

20.
Li H  Li F  Kwan M  He QY  Sun H 《Biopolymers》2005,77(4):173-183
DMT1, also known as Nramp2, is an iron transporter, and belongs to the family of Nramp proteins. Disease-causing mutations both in Nramp1 and Nramp2 occurring at the conserved two adjacent glycine residues located within the fourth transmembrane domain (TM4) suggest that TM4 may serve an important biological function. In the present study, we have determined the high-resolution structures of a synthetic peptide, corresponding to the sequence of the fourth transmembrane domain of rat DMT1 with G185D mutation, in membrane-mimetic environments (e.g., SDS micelles) using NMR spectroscopy and distance-geometry/simulated annealing calculations. The spatial structures showed alpha-helices without a kink in the middle portion of the peptide, with a highly flexible and poorly defined N-terminus. Both the N-terminus and the helical core of the peptide were embedded into the SDS micelles. Interestingly, the folding and membrane location of the C-terminus was pH dependent, being well-folded and inserted into SDS micelles only at a low pH value (4.0). The peptide exhibited amphipathic characteristics, with hydrophilic residues (Asp7, Thr11, Asp14, and Thr15) lying in one side of the helix, which provide a basis for the formation of water-filled channel architectures through self-associations. The significant broadening of the resonances of the hydrophilic residues Asp7, Thr11, and Asp14, which are buried inside SDS micelles, upon addition of Mn2+ further verified the possibility of the formation of a channel through which metal ions pass. The substitution of Gly7 by an aspartate residue neither significantly altered the structure and membrane location of the peptide nor abolished its properties of channel forming and metal permeation compared with the wild-type peptide.  相似文献   

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