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1.
The conformational study on cyclic Ac-Cys-Pro-Xaa-Cys-NHMe (Ac-CPXC-NHMe; X=Ala, Val, Leu, Aib, Gly, His, Phe, Tyr, Asn and Ser) peptides has been carried out using the Empirical Conformational Energy Program for Peptides, version 3 (ECEPP/3) force field and the hydration shell model in the unhydrated and hydrated states. This work has been undertaken to investigate structural implications of the CPXC sequence as the chain reversal for the initiation of protein folding and as the motif for active site of disulfide oxidoreductases. The backbone conformation DAAA is commonly the most feasible for cyclic CPXC peptides in the hydrated state, which has a type I beta-turn at the Pro-Xaa sequence. The proline residue and the hydrogen bond between backbones of two cystines as well as the formation of disulfide bond appear to play a role in stabilizing this preferred conformation of cyclic CPXC peptides. However, the distributions of backbone conformations and beta-turns may indicate that the cyclic CPXC peptide seems to exist as an ensemble of beta-turns and coiled conformations in aqueous solution. The intrinsic stability of the cyclic CPXC motif itself for the active conformation seems to play a role in determining electrochemical properties of disulfide oxidoreductases.  相似文献   

2.
The objective of this study was to explain the increased propensity for the conversion of cyclo-(1,7)-Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser-Pro-Asp-Gly-OH (1), a vitronectin-selective inhibitor, to its cyclic imide counterpart cyclo-(1,7)-Gly-Arg-Gly-Asu-Ser-Pro-Asp-Gly-OH (2). Therefore, we present the conformational analysis of peptides 1 and 2 by NMR and molecular dynamic simulations (MD). Several different NMR experiments, including COSY, COSY-Relay, HOHAHA, NOESY, ROESY, DQF-COSY and HMQC, were used to: (a) identify each proton in the peptides; (b) determine the sequential assignments; (c) determine the cis-trans isomerization of X-Pro peptide bond; and (d) measure the NH-HCalpha coupling constants. NOE- or ROE-constraints were used in the MD simulations and energy minimizations to determine the preferred conformations of cyclic peptides 1 and 2. Both cyclic peptides 1 and 2 have a stable solution conformation; MD simulations suggest that cyclic peptide 1 has a distorted type I beta-turn at Arg2-Gly3-Asp4-Ser5 and cyclic peptide 2 has a pseudo-type I beta-turn at Ser5-Pro6-Asp7-Gly1. A shift in position of the type I beta-turn at Arg2-Gly3-Asp4-Ser5 in peptide 1 to Ser5-Pro6-Asp7-Gly1 in peptide 2 occurs upon formation of the cyclic imide at the Asp4 residue. Although the secondary structure of cyclic peptide 1 is not conducive to succinimide formation, the reaction proceeds via neighbouring group catalysis by the Ser5 side chain. This mechanism is also supported by the intramolecular hydrogen bond network between the hydroxyl side chain and the backbone nitrogen of Ser5. Based on these results, the stability of Asp-containing peptides cannot be predicted by conformational analysis alone; the influence of anchimeric assistance by surrounding residues must also be considered.  相似文献   

3.
A combined 1H-NMR and molecular mechanics study of [Cpp1, Sar7]AVP was performed in order to select the most probable conformations in DMSO solutions. The NMR constraints obtained were employed in the selection of starting conformations of the cyclic moiety of the analog. In particular, the diminished accessibility of the Asn5 NH proton to solvent and the close contact between Cpp1 and Cys6 C alpha H protons suggests a beta-turn conformation at the Phe3-Gln4 residues. Energy minimization was carried out both in the ECEPP/2 (rigid-valence geometry) and in the AMBER (flexible-valence geometry) force fields. Comparison of the experimental and calculated values of NMR characteristics has revealed that conformations containing type I, II, and III beta-turns at the Phe3-Gln4 residues are in reasonable agreement with the experimental data, with a dynamic equilibrium between the beta I (beta III) and beta II type structures of the cyclic part being the most probable. All of these conformations prefer the negative chirality of the disulfide bridge (theta 3 approximately -90 degrees). Five representative conformations were chosen for the acyclic tail: one with a beta I, one with a beta II'-turn at the Sar7-Arg8 residues, two extended-type conformations, and a conformation with a gamma-turn at Sar7. Because only high-energy extended conformations were in agreement with NMR data, it was concluded that the acyclic tail has considerable conformational flexibility in solution. The conformations obtained are discussed in terms of the structure-function relationship of the neurohypophyseal hormone analogs.  相似文献   

4.
The high molecular weight (HMW) proteins from wheat contain a repetitive domain that forms 60-80% of their sequence. The consensus peptides PGQGQQ and GYYPTSPQQ form more than 90% of the domain; both are predicted to adopt beta-turn structure. This paper describes the structural characterization of these consensus peptides and forms the basis for the structural characterization of the repetitive HMW domain, described in the companion paper. The cyclic peptides cyclo-[PGQGQQPGQGQQ] (peptide 1), cyclo-[GYYPTSPQQGA] (peptide 2), and cyclo-[PGQGQQGYYPTSPQQ] (peptide 3) were prepared using a novel synthesis route. In addition, the linear peptides (PGQGQQ)n (n = 1, 3, 5) were prepared. CD, FTIR, and NMR data demonstrated a type II beta-turn structure at QPGQ in the cyclic peptide 1 that was also observed in the linear peptides 9PGQGQQ)n. A type I beta-turn was observed at YPTS and SPQQ in peptides 2 and 3, with additional beta-turns of either type I or II at GAGY (peptide 2) and QQGY (peptide 3). The proline in YPTS showed considerable cis/trans isomerization, with up to 50% of the population in the cis-conformation; the other prolines were more than 90% in the trans conformation. The conversion from trans to cis destroys the type I beta-turn at YPTS, but leads to an increase in turn character at SPQQ and GAGY (peptide 2) or QQGY (peptide 3).  相似文献   

5.
We have previously identified compstatin, a 13-residue cyclic peptide, that inhibits complement activation by binding to C3 and preventing C3 cleavage to C3a and C3b. The structure of compstatin consists of a disulfide bridge and a type I beta-turn located at opposite sides to each other. The disulfide bridge is part of a hydrophobic cluster, and the beta-turn is part of a polar surface. We present the design of compstatin analogs in which we have introduced a series of perturbations in key structural elements of their parent peptide, compstatin. We have examined the consistency of the structures of the designed analogs compared with compstatin using NMR, and we have used the resulting structural information to make structure-complement inhibitory activity correlations. We propose the following. 1) Even in the absence of the disulfide bridge, a linear analog has a propensity for structure formation consistent with a turn of a 3(10)-helix or a beta-turn. 2) The type I beta-turn is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for activity. 3) Our substitutions outside the type I beta-turn of compstatin have altered the turn population but not the turn structure. 4) Flexibility of the beta-turn is essential for activity. 5) The type I beta-turn introduces reversibility and sufficiently separates the two sides of the peptide, whereas the disulfide bridge prevents the termini from drifting apart, thus aiding in the formation of the hydrophobic cluster. 6) The hydrophobic cluster at the linked termini is involved in binding to C3 and activity but alone is not sufficient for activity. 7) beta-Turn residues Gln(5) (Asn(5))-Asp(6)-Trp(7)(Phe(7))-Gly(8) are specific for the turn formation, but only Gln(5)(Asn(5))-Asp(6)-Trp(7)-Gly(8) residues are specific for activity. 8) Trp(7) is likely to be involved in direct interaction with C3, possibly through the formation of a hydrogen bond. Finally we propose a binding model for the C3-compstatin complex.  相似文献   

6.
The conformational analysis by NMR, IR, and molecular modeling of tetrapeptides containing morpholine-3-carboxylic acid (Mor) as a proline surrogate is presented. The relationship between the chirality of the cyclic amino acid at position i+1 and the turn propensity is maintained with respect to the reference proline-containing peptides, although marked differences in the type of folded structures were observed. The conformational profile of morpholine-containing turn peptides as a function of the chirality of the cyclic amino acid indicated that the heterochiral tetrapeptide containing the D-isomer of the cyclic amino acid is more prone to nucleate compact folded structures, although with no resemblance to the beta-turn structures of D-proline-containing peptides. Also, the solvation system proved to influence the organization of folded structures, as in the more interactive CD(3)CN the model peptides showed more compact conformations. The L-Mor-containing peptide displayed two rotamers at the Val-Mor amide bond. The trans isomer did not experience any turn structures, nor any intramolecular hydrogen-bonds, whereas the cis isomer showed a strong preference for a type VI beta-turn structure, thus providing a different conformational asset with respect to the beta-turn structure as reported for the reference L-proline model peptide.  相似文献   

7.
Pallaghy PK  He W  Jimenez EC  Olivera BM  Norton RS 《Biochemistry》2000,39(42):12845-12852
The contryphan family of cyclic peptides, isolated recently from various species of cone shell, has the conserved sequence motif NH(3)(+)-X(1)COD-WX(5)PWC-NH(2), where X(1) is either Gly or absent, O is 4-trans-hydroxyproline, and X(5) is Glu, Asp, or Gln. The solution structures described herein of two new naturally occurring contryphan sequences, contryphan-Sm and des[Gly1]-contryphan-R, are similar to those of contryphan-R, the structure of which has been determined recently [Pallaghy et al. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 11553-11559]. The (1)H NMR chemical shifts of another naturally occurring peptide, contryphan-P, indicate that it also adopts a similar structure. All of these contryphans exist in solution as a mixture of two conformers due to cis-trans isomerization about the Cys2-Hyp3 peptide bond. The lower cis-trans ratio for contryphan-Sm enabled elucidation of the 3D structure of both its major and its minor forms, for which the patterns of (3)J(H)(alpha)(HN) coupling constants are very different. As with contryphan-R, the structure of the major form of contryphan-Sm (cis Cys2-Hyp3 peptide bond) contains an N-terminal chain reversal and a C-terminal type I beta-turn. The minor conformer (trans peptide bond) forms a hairpin structure with sheetlike hydrogen bonds and a type II beta-turn, with the D-Trp4 at the 'Gly position' of the turn. The ratio of conformers arising from cis-trans isomerism around the peptide bond preceding Hyp3 is sensitive to both the amino acid sequence and the solution conditions, varying from 2.7:1 to 17:1 across the five sequences. The sequence and structural determinants of the cis-trans isomerism have been elucidated by comparison of the cis-trans ratios for these peptides with those for contryphan-R and an N-acetylated derivative thereof. The cis-trans ratio is reduced for peptides in which either the charged N-terminal ammonium or the X(5) side-chain carboxylate is neutralized, implying that an electrostatic interaction between these groups stabilizes the cis conformer relative to the trans. These results on the structures and cis-trans equilibrium of different conformers suggest a paradigm of 'locally determined but globally selected' folding for cyclic peptides and constrained protein loops, where the series of stereochemical centers in the loop dictates the favorable conformations and the equilibrium is determined by a small number of side-chain interactions.  相似文献   

8.
The cyclododecapeptide, (Ala1-Pro2-Gly3-Val4-Gly5-Val6)2, was synthesized and its secondary structure was evaluated from extensive studies in dimethyl sulphoxide, trifluoroethanol and water using NMR methods. A selective decoupling technique in 13C-NMR has been utilized in order to assign the C=O carbon resonances. Temperature dependence of the peptide NH protons and the solvent perturbation of the peptide NH and C=O resonances show the occurrence in all solvents of a beta-turn (a 10-membered H-bond between the Val4 NH and Ala1 C=O) and a gamma-turn, an 11-membered H-bond between the Gly3 NH and the Gly5 C=O; and a possible 14-membered H-bond between the Ala1 NH and the Val4 C=O in dimethyl sulphoxide and trifluoroethanol. These secondary structural features are compared with the linear polyhexapeptide and found the the beta-turn and the gamma-turn are the common conformational features of these peptide systems.  相似文献   

9.
The conformational analysis of two synthetic octapeptides, Boc-Leu-Val-Val-D-Pro-L-Ala-Leu-Val-Val-OMe (1) and Boc-Leu-Val-Val-D-Pro-D-Ala-Leu-Val-Val-OMe (2) has been carried out in order to investigate the effect of beta-turn stereochemistry on designed beta-hairpin structures. Five hundred megahertz (1)H NMR studies establish that both peptides 1 and 2 adopt predominantly beta-hairpin conformations in methanol solution. Specific nuclear Overhauser effects provide evidence for a type II' beta-turn conformation for the D-Pro-L-Ala segment in 1, while the NMR data suggest that the type I' D-Pro-D-Ala beta-turn conformation predominates in peptide 2. Evidence for a minor conformation in peptide 2, in slow exchange on the NMR time scale, is also presented. Interstrand registry is demonstrated in both peptides 1 and 2. The crystal structure of 1 reveals two independent molecules in the crystallographic asymmetric unit, both of which adopt beta-hairpin conformations nucleated by D-Pro-L-Ala type II' beta-turns and are stabilized by three cross-strand hydrogen bonds. CD spectra for peptides 1 and 2 show marked differences, presumably as a consequence of the superposition of spectral bands arising from both beta-turn and beta-strand conformations.  相似文献   

10.
A cyclic somatostatin analog [structure: see text] (1) has been synthesized. Biological assays show that this compound has strong binding affinities to somatostatin hsst2 and hsst5 receptor subtypes (5.2 and 1.2 nM, respectively, and modest affinity to hsst4 (41.1 nM)). Our conformational analysis carried out in DMSO-d6 indicates that this compound exists as two structures arising from the trans and cis configurations of the peptide bond between Phe7 and N-alkylated Gly8. However, neither conformer exhibits a type II' beta-turn. This is the first report of a potent bioactive somatostatin analog that does not exhibit a type II' beta-turn in solution. Molecular dynamics simulations (500 ps) carried out at 300 K indicate that the backbone of compound 1 is more flexible than other cyclic somatostatin analogs formed by disulfide bonds.  相似文献   

11.
The conformation of a series of cyclic enkephalin analogues of a general formula X(1)-cyclo[Y(2)-Z(3)-Nal(4)-Leu(5)] (Nal: beta-(2-naphthyl)alanine), where X = Tyr, Phe, or Phe(NO(2)), Y = D-Dab or L-Dab (Dab: 2,4-diaminobutyric acid), and Z = D-Pro or L-Pro, was studied by means of NMR spectroscopy and theoretical conformational analysis with the Empirical Conformational Energy Program for Peptides and Proteins force field plus solvation. The NMR measurements were performed in dimethyl sulfoxide solution. The nuclear Overhauser effect intensities and coupling constants were used to compute the statistical weights of the conformations of the ensemble generated in global conformational searches. The purpose of this study was to determine whether introducing the D- or L-proline residue in position 3 can produce peptides with both rigid backbone and significant separation of the pharmacophore groups in position 1 and 4 (as required for high affinity for the mu-type opioid receptors). It was found that the analogues with D-Dab in position 2 and D-Pro in position 3 possess a stable type II' beta-turn at positions 3 and 4, which rigidifies the cyclic backbone; this finding was confirmed by independent measurements of the temperature coefficients of the amide protons, which indicated very significant screening of the Leu(5) amide proton from the solvent. However, these analogues were found to possess a short interchromophore distance. The analogues containing both Dab and Pro in the L-configuration are characterized by a larger interchromophore distance; however, they do not possess a stable beta-turn and have therefore a higher conformational flexibility. The modifications proposed in this work are therefore not likely to lead to enkephalin analogues with a high affinity for the mu-receptors.  相似文献   

12.
The solution structure of contryphan-Vn, a cyclic peptide with a double cysteine S-S bridge and containing a D-tryptophan extracted from the venom of the cone snail Conus ventricosus, has been determined by NMR spectroscopy using a variety of homonuclear and heteronuclear NMR methods and restrained molecular dynamics simulations. The main conformational features of backbone contryphan-Vn are a type IV beta-turn from Gly 1 to Lys 6 and a type I beta-turn from Lys 6 to Cys 9. As already found in other contryphans, one of the two prolines--the Pro4--is mainly in the cis conformation while Pro7 is trans. A small hydrophobic region probably partly shielded from solvent constituted from the close proximity of side chains of Pro7 and Trp8 was observed together with a persistent salt bridge between Asp2 and Lys6, which has been revealed by the diagnostic observation of specific nuclear Overhauser effects. The salt bridge was used as a restraint in the molecular dynamics in vacuum but without inserting explicit electrostatic contribution in the calculations. The backbone of the unique conformational family found of contryphan-Vn superimposes well with those of contryphan-Sm and contryphan-R. This result indicates that the contryphan structural motif represents a robust and conserved molecular scaffold whose main structural determinants are the size of the intercysteine loop and the presence and location in the sequence of the D-Trp and the two Pro residues.  相似文献   

13.
Kaerner A  Rabenstein DL 《Biochemistry》1999,38(17):5459-5470
alpha-Conotoxin GI is a 13 residue snail toxin peptide cross-linked by Cys2-Cys7 and Cys3-Cys13 disulfide bridges. The formation of the two disulfide bonds by thiol/disulfide exchange with oxidized glutathione (GSSG) has been characterized. To characterize formation of the first disulfide bond in each of the two pathways by which the two disulfide bonds can form, two model peptides were synthesized in which Cys3 and Cys13 (Cono-1) or Cys2 and Cys7 (Cono-2) were replaced by alanines. Equilibrium constants were determined for formation of the single disulfide bonds of Cono-1 and Cono-2, and an overall equilibrium constant was measured for formation of the two disulfide bonds of alpha-conotoxin GI in pH 7.00 buffer and in pH 7. 00 buffer plus 8 M urea using concentrations obtained by HPLC analysis of equilibrium thiol/disulfide exchange reaction mixtures. The results indicate a modest amount of cooperativity in the formation of the second disulfide bond in both of the two-step pathways by which alpha-conotoxin GI folds into its native structure at pH 7.00. However, when considered in terms of the reactive thiolate species, the results indicate substantial cooperativity in formation of the second disulfide bond. The solution conformational and structural properties of Cono-1, Cono-2, and alpha-conotoxin GI were studied by 1H NMR to identify structural features which might facilitate formation of the disulfide bonds or are induced by formation of the disulfide bonds. The NMR data indicate that both Cono-1 and Cono-2 have some secondary structure in solution, including some of the same secondary structure as alpha-conotoxin GI, which facilitates formation of the second disulfide bond by thiol/disulfide exchange. However, both Cono-1 and Cono-2 are considerably less structured than alpha-conotoxin GI, which indicates that formation of the second disulfide bond to give the Cys2-Cys7, Cys3-Cys13 pairing induces considerable structure into the backbone of the peptide.  相似文献   

14.
The NMR structural analysis of two fertilin(beta) mimics cyclo(EC2DC1)YNH2, 1, and cyclo(D2EC2D1C1)YNH2, 2 is described. Both of these mimics are moderate inhibitors of sperm-egg binding with IC50 values of 500 microm in a mouse in vitro fertilization assay. For peptide 1, the optimized conformations that best match the NMR data have a pseudo-type II' beta-turn with the linker and Glu at the i+1 and i+2 positions, respectively. The EC2D1C1 sequence is in a nonclassical (type IV) beta-turn. For peptide 2, the conformation that best matches the NMR data has two turns: a pseudo-type II' beta-turn in the D2EC2D1 sequence followed by a nonclassical beta-turn in the EC2D1C1 sequence. The Cbeta-Cbeta distance between E and D1 in peptide 1 is 9.1 A, in peptide 2, it is 7.7 A. Thus, one possibility for the high IC50 values of these cyclic peptides is that the acidic residues are not constrained to a sufficiently tight turn, and thus much entropy must still be lost upon binding to the alpha6beta1 integrin. This explains why the cyclic peptides are the same as linear peptides at inhibiting sperm-egg binding.  相似文献   

15.
Song J  Xu P  Koutychenko A  Ni F 《Biopolymers》2002,65(6):373-386
The relationship between the free and bound conformations of bioactive peptides is explored using the epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like thrombomodulin fragment hTM409-426 as a model system. The hTM409-426 peptide has a sequence of C(409)PEGYILDDGFIC(421)TDIDE (with a disulfide bond between Cys409 and Cys421) and is a selective inhibitor of thrombin. Upon binding to thrombin, hTM409-426 adopts a well-defined conformation-namely, a beta-turn followed by an antiparallel beta-sheet, similar to those found in all other EGF-like protein repeats (Hrabal et al., Protein Science, 1996, Vol. 5, 195-203). Here we demonstrate that, at pH 6.8 and at 25 degrees C, the hTM409-426 peptide in the free state is very flexible, but still populates a type II beta-turn over residues Pro410-Glu411-Gly412-Tyr413 and the clustering of some hydrophobic side chains, both of which are present in the thrombin-bound conformation. At a lower temperature of 5 degrees C, significant conformational shifts of the C alpha H proton resonances and extensive medium- and long-range NOEs are observed, indicating the presence of folded conformations with unique backbone-backbone and side-chain interactions. A comparison of the NOE patterns in the free state with transferred NOEs shows that the free-state folded and the thrombin-bound conformations of the hTM409-426 peptide are very similar, particularly over residues Pro410-Ile424. The folded conformation of hTM409-426 appears to be stabilized by two hydrophobic clusters, one formed by the side chains of residues Pro410, Tyr413, Leu415, and Phe419 and the Cys409-Cys421 disulfide bond, the second involving residues Ile414 and Ile424. These results indicate that the overall topology of the thrombin-bound conformation of the hTM409-426 peptide is prefolded in the free state and the primary sequence (including the disulfide bond) may be selective for an ensemble of conformations similar to that recognized by thrombin.  相似文献   

16.
The results of conformational analysis of linear and cyclic peptides from the 276SALLEDPVG(284) sequence of glycoprotein D of Herpes simplex virus are presented. The epitope peptides were synthesized by SPPS and on resin cyclization was applied for preparation of cyclic compounds. Circular dichroism spectroscopy, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) were used to determine of the solution structure of both linear and cyclic peptides. The results indicated that the cyclopeptides containing the core of the epitope (DPVG) as a part of the cycle have more stable beta-turn structure than the linear peptides or the cyclic analogues, where the core motif is not a part of the cycle. NMR study of H-SALLc(EDPVGK)-NH(2) confirm presence of a type I beta-turn structure which includes the DPVG epitope core.  相似文献   

17.
Two series of dehydropeptides of the general formulae Boc-Gly-X-Phe-p-NA, Boc-Gly-Gly-X-Phe-p-NA, Gly-X-Gly-Phe-p-NA.TFA, and Boc-Gly-X-Gly-Phe-p-NA, with X = Delta(Z)Phe and DeltaAla, were studied with NMR in DMSO and CDCl(3)-DMSO, and with CD in MeOH, MeCN, and TFE. The NMR spectra measured in DMSO suggest that peptides with the DeltaPhe residue next to Phe are folded whereas peptides with Gly between DeltaPhe and Phe are less ordered. NMR spectra of DeltaAla-containing peptides indicate that these peptides are flexible and their conformational equilibria are populated by many different conformations. The CD spectra show that conformational properties of the peptides studied are distinctly influenced by a mutual position of the dehydroamino acid residue and the p-NA group. They indicate that all dehydropeptides with the DeltaPhe residue, Boc-Gly-DeltaAla-Phe-p-NA, and Boc-Gly-Gly-DeltaAla-Phe-p-NA adopt ordered conformations in all solvents studied, presumably of the beta-turn type. The last two peptides exhibit surprising chiroptical properties. Their spectra show exciton coupling-like couplets in the region of the p-NA group absorption. This shape of CD spectra suggests a rigid, chiral conformation with a fixed disposition of the p-NA group. The CD spectra indicate that Boc-Gly-DeltaAla-Gly-Phe-p-NA and Gly-DeltaAla-Gly-Phe-p-NA.TFA are unordered, independently of the solvent.  相似文献   

18.
As part of a program to investigate the origins of peptide-carbohydrate mimicry, the conformational preferences of peptides that mimic the group B streptococcal type III capsular polysaccharide have been investigated by NMR spectroscopy. Detailed studies of a dodecapeptide, FDTGAFDPDWPA, a molecular mimic of the polysaccharide antigen, and two new analogs, indicated a propensity for beta-turn formation. Different beta-turn types were found to be present in the trans and cis (Trp-10-Pro-11) isomers of the peptide: the trans isomer favored a type I beta-turn from residues Asp-7-Trp-10, whereas the cis isomer exhibited a type VI beta-turn from residues Asp-9-Ala-12. The interaction of the dodecapeptide FDTGAFDPDWPA with a protective anti-group B Streptococcus monoclonal antibody has also been investigated, by transferred nuclear Overhauser effect NMR spectroscopy and saturation-transfer difference NMR spectroscopy (STD-NMR). The peptide was found to adopt a type I beta-turn conformation on binding to the antibody; the peptide residues (Asp-7-Trp-10) forming this turn are recognized by the antibody, as demonstrated by STD-NMR experiments. STD-NMR studies of the interactions of oligosaccharide fragments of the capsular polysaccharide have also been performed and provide evidence for the existence of a conformational epitope.  相似文献   

19.
Park SJ  Park S  Ahn HC  Kim IS  Lee BJ 《Peptides》2004,25(2):199-205
The peptides NKDIL and EPDIM, respectively derived from the 2nd and 4th domains of betaig-h3, were fully active in mediating cell adhesion through interactions with alpha3beta1 integrin [Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 294 (2002) 940; J. Biol. Chem. 275 (2000) 30907]. Here, the conformational differences between NKDIL and EPDIM in water and in membrane environments were studied using CD spectroscopy, and their structures in sodium dodecylsulfate micelles were determined by NMR. The two peptides adopt beta-turn structures like RGD peptides, and have more regular structures in micelles than in aqueous buffers. EPDIM shows a distorted type I beta-turn for the PDIM segment in a membrane environment. The structure of NKDIL is similar with the standard type I' beta-turn, but shows large backbone flexibility even in a membrane environment. The conformational change of the 4th repeated domain of betaig-h3 in micelle solutions suggests that the Asp-Ile motif of the 4th fas-1 domain (EPDIM) would be solvent-exposed and could interact with integrin alpha3beta1 in a membrane environment. The present study provides a structural basis of betaig-h3 function and information for the development of integrin-regulating drugs involving the wound healing protein.  相似文献   

20.
The N-terminal tetrapeptide segments of dermorphin (Tyr-D-Ala-Phe-Gly-Tyr-Pro-Ser-NH(2)) and deltorphin (Tyr-D-Ala-Phe-Asp/Glu-Val-Val-Gly-NH(2)) are agonists at the opioid receptors micro and delta, respectively. [D-Arg(2), Lys(4)]-dermorphin-(1-4) amide (Tyr-D-Arg-Phe-Lys-NH(2), DALDA) and [Dmt(1)]DALDA (where Dmt is 2',6'-dimethyltyrosine) are among the most potent and selective micro-agonists reported to date, both in vitro (having picomolar micro receptor affinity) and in vivo. In this communication, conformation-activity studies of the following four cyclic analogs of DALDA are presented and discussed: the lead peptide S(2),S(4)-cyclo (Tyr-D-Cys-Phe-Cys-NH(2)), constrained by means of an S(4.2)--S(4.4) disulfide between Cys(2) and Cys(4); its two cis and trans C(4.2)--C(4.4)-olefinic dicarba analogs, and the product of saturation of them both. They are potent nonselective or moderately micro-selective opioid agonists in vitro.They have been synthesized and tested earlier [Berezowska I, Chung NN, Lemieux C, Wilkes BC, and Schiller PW, Acta Biochim Polon 53, 2006, 73-76]. We have studied their conformations using NMR and molecular dynamics. With major conformational constraints imposed by the 11-membered ring spanning residues 2-4, they show well defined conformations of this ring, while the exocylic Tyr(1) and Phe(3) side chains still have significant conformational freedom. The more active and selective micro versus delta disulfide and saturated dicarba agonists seem to have in common: (i) their ring structures more flexilble than those of the other two and (ii) their ring structures similar to each other and more diverse than those in the other two. Given this and the small size of the peptides having confirmed bioactivity profiles, there is a chance that their conformations determined in solution approach receptor-bound conformations. Copyright (c) 2008 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

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