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1.
IR spectra of rosamycin and its solutions in inert (CCl4 and C2Cl4), proton acceptor (tetrahydrofuran, hexametapol and diethylamine) and proton donor (CHCl3 and CH3OD) solvents were studied at various concentrations (0.1 to 0.001 mol/l) and temperatures (20 to 100 degrees C) in the region of the vC = O and vOH absorption bands (1600-1800 and 3200 3650 sm 1). It was found that the absorption bands at 3480 and 3560 sm-1 observed in the spectra of rosamycin diluted solutions in the inert solvents referred to variations of vOH...N of the aminosugar fragment and to vOH...O = C of the ester group of the macrocycle. Bands at 1697 and 1717 sm-1 referred to vC = O of the ketone and aldehyde carbonyl groups and band at 1728 sm-1 referred to vC = O of the ester group whose carbonyl was involved in the C = H...HO intramolecular hydrogen bond. Intensity of vC = O band (1745 sm-1) of the free ester group was nought. However, it increased with using the proton acceptor solvents. OH...N and OH...O = C intramolecular hydrogen bonds stabilized rosamycin molecule conformation. Mechanism of rosamycin interaction with the proton donor and acceptor molecules was elucidated. It was shown that tertiary nitrogen was the center of rosamycin molecule protonation.  相似文献   

2.
The association and conformational structure of the molecule of erythromycin in solutions of CCl4, C2Cl4 and CHCl3 were studied by the IR spectra in the region of v OH and vC = O. The analysis of the concentration and temperature changes showed that the erythromycin association was accounted for by the hydrogen linkage of OH ... O = C to the ester group. In the monomer molecule of erythromycin, all hydroxyl groups participated in the intramolecular hydrogen linkage. Band 3513 cm-1 belonged to the OH group in the five-membered cycles of OH ... O. Components 3500, 3530 and 3560 cm-1 of the wide band vOH were assigned to the cycles with OH ... N and OH ... O linkages of a larger size. The association was due to a break in a part of the intramolecular hydrogen linkages. Addition of strong acceptors of proton-hexamethanol and trioctylphosphinoxide to the solution resulted in attenuation of these bands and appearance of a strong band vOH of the erythromycin-acceptor complexes. In the presence of monochloroacetic acid in the solution of CHCl3 stoichiometric protonization of erythromycin was observed. The total acid was in the form of anion (vaCO-2 1610 cm-1) up to a ratio of 1:1. The protonization proceeded according to the nitrogen atom since the antibiotic spectrum in the region of vC=O did not change. Propionic acid titrated erythromycin in methanol solution and in mixtures of water and methanol up to a ratio of 1:5 (v/v). However, in the solution of CHCl3 equilibrium between the neutral and ionized molecules of the acid was seen.  相似文献   

3.
Spectroscopic evidence is presented for the lack of intramolecular hydrogen bonding in a simple peptide derivative of 5,5-dimethylthiazolidine-4-carboxylic acid (Dtc). The infrared spectrum of Boc-Pro-Ile-OMe 1 in nonpolar solvents displays two N-H stretching bands at 3419 and 3330 cm-1 in CCl4 and one at 3417 and 3328 cm-1 in CHCl3. The low frequency band at 3328-3330 cm-1 may be assigned to conformations with an intramolecular hydrogen bond between the Ile N-H and Boc C = O. The band at 3417-3419 cm-1 is the normal Ile N-H stretch. In the polar solvent CH3CN only one NH stretching band at 3365 cm-1 is observed. The IR spectrum of Boc-Dtc-Ile-OMe 2, on the other hand, displays one N-H stretching band at 3423 cm-1 in CCl4 and one at 3418 cm-1 in CHCl3. The IR spectrum of 2 does not display the N-H stretching band that would arise from intramolecular hydrogen bonding between the Boc C = O and Ile N-H. The lack of intramolecular hydrogen bonding for Boc-Dtc-Ile-OMe 2 was evident also in the NMR spectra in nonpolar solvents. The 1H-NMR spectrum of the Pro dipeptide 1 in 50% CDCl3/C6D6 at 20 degrees displayed two Ile-NH signals at 6.58 and 7.74 ppm. The latter signal corresponds to the intramolecularly hydrogen bonded Ile-NH in the trans-Boc isomer of 1 (60% of the total population), while the former signal corresponds to the nonhydrogen bonded Ile-NH in the cis-Boc isomer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Antimycin A (antimycin), one of the first known and most potent inhibitors of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, binds to the quinone reduction site of the cytochrome bc1 complex. Structure-activity relationship studies have shown that the N-formylamino-salicyl-amide group is responsible for most of the binding specificity, and suggested that a low pKa for the phenolic OH group and an intramolecular H-bond between that OH and the carbonyl O of the salicylamide linkage are important. Two previous X-ray structures of antimycin bound to vertebrate bc1 complex gave conflicting results. A new structure reported here of the bovine mitochondrial bc1 complex at 2.28 A resolution with antimycin bound, allows us for the first time to reliably describe the binding of antimycin and shows that the intramolecular hydrogen bond described in solution and in the small-molecule structure is replaced by one involving the NH rather than carbonyl O of the amide linkage, with rotation of the amide group relative to the aromatic ring. The phenolic OH and formylamino N form H-bonds with conserved Asp228 of cytochrome b, and the formylamino O H-bonds via a water molecule to Lys227. A strong density, the right size and shape for a diatomic molecule is found between the other side of the dilactone ring and the alphaA helix.  相似文献   

5.
The conformation of the acyclic biscystine peptide S,S'-bis(Boc-Cys-Ala-OMe) has been studied in the solid state by x-ray diffraction, and in solution by 1H- and 13C-nmr, ir, and CD methods. The peptide molecule has a twofold rotation symmetry and adopts an intramolecular antiparallel beta-sheet structure in the solid state. The two antiparallel extended strands are stabilized by two hydrogen bonds between the Boc CO and Ala NH groups [N...O 2.964 (3) A, O...HN 2.11 (3) A, and NH...O angle 162 (3) degrees]. The disulfide bridge has a right-handed conformation with the torsion angle C beta SSC beta = 95.8 (2) degrees. In solution the presence of a twofold rotation symmetry in the molecule is evident from the 1H- and 13C-nmr spectra. 1H-nmr studies, using solvent and temperature dependencies of NH chemical shifts, paramagnetic radical induced line broadening, and rate of deuterium-hydrogen exchange effects on NH resonances, suggest that Ala NH is solvent shielded and intramolecularly hydrogen bonded in CDCl3 and in (CD3)2SO. Nuclear Overhauser effects observed between Cys C alpha H and Ala NH protons and ir studies provide evidence of the occurrence of antiparallel beta-sheet structure in these solvents. The CD spectra of the peptide in organic solvents are characteristic of those observed for cystine peptides that have been shown to adopt antiparallel beta-sheet structures.  相似文献   

6.
Infrared spectroscopy in the interval from 1800 to 1300 cm-1 has been used to investigate the secondary structure and the hydrogen/deuterium exchange behavior of bacteriorhodopsin and bovine rhodopsin in their respective native membranes. The amide I' and amide II' regions from spectra of membrane suspensions in D2O were decomposed into constituent bands by use of a curve-fitting procedure. The amide I' bands could be fit with a minimum of three theoretical components having peak positions at 1664, 1638, and 1625 cm-1 for bacteriorhodopsin and 1657, 1639, and 1625 cm-1 for rhodopsin. For both of these membrane proteins, the amide I' spectrum suggests that alpha-helix is the predominant form of peptide chain secondary structure, but that a substantial amount of beta-sheet conformation is present as well. The shape of the amide I' band was pH-sensitive for photoreceptor membranes, but not for purple membrane, indicating that membrane-bound rhodopsin undergoes a conformation change at acidic pH. Peptide hydrogen exchange of bacteriorhodopsin and rhodopsin was monitored by observing the change in the ratio of integrated absorbance (Aamide II'/Aamide I') during the interval from 1.5 to 25 h after membranes were introduced into buffered D2O. The fraction of peptide groups in a very slowly exchanging secondary structure was estimated to be 0.71 for bacteriorhodopsin at pD 7. The corresponding fraction in vertebrate rhodopsin was estimated to be less than or equal to 0.60. These findings are discussed in relationship to previous studies of hydrogen exchange behavior and to structural models for both proteins.  相似文献   

7.
This paper shows that backbone amide proton titration shifts in polypeptide chains are a very sensitive manifestation of intramolecular hydrogen bonding between carboxylate groups and backbone amide protons. The population of specific hydrogen-bonded structures in the ensemble of species that constitutes the conformation of a flexible nonglobular linear peptide can be determined from the extent of the titration shifts. As an illustration, an investigation of the molecular conformation of the linear peptide H-Gly-Gly-L -Glu-L -Ala-OH is described. The proposed use of amide proton titration shifts for investigating polypeptide conformation is based on 360-MHz 1H-nmr studies of selected linear oligopeptides in H2O solutions. It was found that only a very limited number of amide protons in a polypeptide chain show sizable intrinsic intration shifts arising from through-bond interactions with ionizable groups. These are the amide proton of the C-terminal amino acid residue, the amide protons of Asp and the residues following Asp, and possibly the amide proton of the residue next to the N-terminus. Since the intrinsic titration shifts are upfield, the downfield titration shifts arising from conformation-dependent through-space interactions, in particular hydrogen bonding between the amide protons and carboxylate groups, can readily be identified.  相似文献   

8.
A Otter  G Kotovych  P G Scott 《Biochemistry》1989,28(20):8003-8010
The solution conformation of the type I collagen alpha-1 chain N-telopeptide has been studied by CD and 1H NMR spectroscopy at 600 MHz in CD3OH/H2O (60/40 v/v) and H2O solutions. The 19 amino acids form the N-terminal end of the alpha-1 polypeptide chain. By the combined application of several two-dimensional, phase-sensitive NMR techniques (COSY, RELAY, ROESY), a complete assignment of all proton resonances was achieved, and the conformation of the backbone could be established on the basis of the coupling constant and NOE data. In CD3OH/H2O solutions the spectroscopic evidence clearly indicates that two sections of the molecule (pE1-Y6 and T11-M19) are extended and that the D7-S10 segment forms a beta-turn, stabilized by a hydrogen bond between NH(S10) and CO(D7). The data suggest that the turn is of the type I kind (minor) and that it coexists with an extended structure (major conformer). Interactions between the two extended parts of the peptide were not observed, thus excluding the existence of a beta-sheet. In H2O solution the conformation is significantly different, with no beta-turn, but a completely extended structure is observed.  相似文献   

9.
M Jackson  H H Mantsch 《Biopolymers》1991,31(10):1205-1212
The structure of valinomycin in a range of organic solvents of varying polarity and in detergent and lipid dispersions has been studied by Fourier transform ir spectroscopy. In solvents of low polarity such as chloroform, ir spectra of valinomycin are fully consistent with the bracelet structure proposed on the basis of nmr spectroscopy, showing a single narrow amide I component attributable to the presence of beta-turns and a single band arising from nonhydrogen-bonded ester C = O groups. K+ complexation results in a downward shift in the amide I band frequency, indicating an increase in the strength of the amide hydrogen bonds, along with a shift to lower frequencies of the ester C = O absorption due to a reduction in electron density in these bonds upon complexation. Identical results were obtained with NH4+, a finding not previously reported. In solvents of both medium (CHCl3/DMSO 3:1) and high (pure DMSO) polarity, we find evidence of significant disruption of the internal hydrogen-bonding network of the peptide and the appearance of a band suggesting the presence of free amide C = O groups. In such solvents, complexation with K+ and NH4+ was not observed. The structure of valinomycin in detergent micelles resembles that in nonpolar organic solvents. However, changes were found in the amide I and ester carbonyl maxima as 2H2O penetrated the micelle which suggest significant interaction between the solvent and peptide. Complexation with K+ was reduced in cationic detergent micelles as a result of a decrease in the effective K+ concentration due to charge repulsion at the micelle surface.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The technique of resonance Raman spectroscopy has been used to investigate the interaction of the antibiotic rifampicin with Escherichia coli RNA polymerase. Spectra were analyzed by generating the first derivative of each recorded spectrum using the Savitsky-Golay algorithm. The only band that shifted significantly in the resonance Raman spectrum of rifampicin upon the formation of the drug-core polymerase complex was the amide III band. It underwent an 8 cm-1 shift from 1306 cm-1 in aqueous solution to 1314 cm-1. A comparable shift was observed for the rifampicin-holoenzyme complex. Thus, the interaction of the sigma subunit with the core polymerase does not significantly alter the manner in which rifampicin interacts with RNA polymerase. The nature of this shift has been analyzed further by recording the resonance Raman spectrum of rifampicin in a variety of solvents with different hydrogen-bonding solvents (benzene and carbon disulfide) the amide III band was observed at approximately 1220 cm-1; in dimethyl sulfoxide, a weak hydrogen-bond acceptor, 1274 cm-1; in water, a strong hydrogen-bonding solvent, 1306 cm-1; and finally, in triethylamine, a stronger hydrogen-bonding solvent than water, it was observed at 1314 cm-1. Thus, as the hydrogen-bonding ability of the solvent increased, the amide III band shifted to higher frequency. Based on these results, the rifampicin binding site in RNA polymerase provides a stronger hydrogen-bonding environment for the amidic proton of rifampicin than is encountered when rifampicin is free in aqueous solution.  相似文献   

11.
Beware of proteins in DMSO   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The effect on the secondary structure of representative alpha-helical, beta-sheet and disordered proteins by varying concentrations of dimethyl sulphoxide (DMSO) in 2H2O has been investigated by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Significant perturbations of protein secondary structure are induced by DMSO and DMSO/2H2O mixtures. For highly structured proteins, such as myoglobin and concanavalin A, the infrared spectra point to a progressive destabilisation of the secondary structure until at moderate DMSO concentrations (around 0.33 mol fraction) intermolecular beta-sheet formation and aggregation are induced, as indicated by the appearance of a strong band at 1621 cm-1. This is a direct consequence of the disruption of intramolecular peptide group interactions by DMSO (partial unfolding). At higher DMSO concentrations (above 0.75 mol fraction), such aggregates are dissociated by disruption of the intermolecular C = O...2H-N deuterium bonds. The presence of a single amide I band at 1662 cm-1 corresponding to free amide C = O groups indicates that at high concentrations and in pure DMSO the proteins are completely unfolded, lacking any secondary structure. While low concentrations of DMSO showed no detectable effect upon the gross secondary structure of myoglobin and concanavalin A, the thermal stability of both proteins was markedly reduced. In alpha-casein, a highly unstructured protein, the situation is one of direct competition. The amide I maximum in 2H2O, at 1645 cm-1, is typical of unordered proteins with C = O groups deuterium-bonded predominantly to 2H2O. Addition of DMSO disrupts such interactions by competing with the peptide C = O group for the deuterium bond donor capacity of the 2H2O, and so progressively increases the amide I maximum until it stabilizes at 1663 cm-1, a position indicative of free C = O groups.  相似文献   

12.
The solution conformation of a model hexapeptide Asp-Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser-Gly (DRGDSG) containing the RGD sequence has been studied in DMSO-d6 as well as in aqueous solution (H2O:D2O/90:10%) by 1H NMR spectroscopy. The unambiguous identification of spin systems of various amino acid residues and sequence specific assignment of all proton resonances was achieved by a combination of two dimensional COSY and NOESY experiments. The temperature coefficient data of the amide proton chemical shifts in conjunction with the vicinal coupling constants, i.e. 3JNH-C alpha H, NOESY and ROESY results indicate that the peptide in both the solvents exists in a blend of conformers with beta-sheet like extended backbone structure and folded conformations. The folded conformers do not appear to be stabilised by intramolecular hydrogen bonding. Our results are consistent with the flexibility of RGD segment observed in the NMR studies on the protein echistatin containing the RGD motif (references 23-25).  相似文献   

13.
The conformational features of dihydrosphingomyelin (DHSM), the major phospholipid of human lens membranes, were investigated by 1H and 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Several postulates emerge from the observed trends: (a) in partially hydrated samples of DHSM in CDCl3 above 13 mM, at which lipid-lipid interactions prevail, the amide proton is mostly involved in intermolecular H-bonds that link neighboring phospholipids through bridging water molecules. In the absence of water, the NH group is involved in an intramolecular H-bond that restricts the mobility of the phosphate group. (b) In the monomeric form of the lipid molecule, the amide proton of the major conformer is bound intramolecularly with one of the anionic and/or ester oxygens of the phosphate group. A minor conformer may also be present in which the NH proton participates in an intramolecular H-bond linking to the OH group of the sphingoid base. (c) Complete hydration leads to an extension of the head group as water molecules bind to the phosphate and NH groups via H-bonds, thus disrupting the intramolecular H-bonds prevalent at low concentrations.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of N-terminal amino acid stereochemistry on prolyl amide geometry and peptide turn conformation were investigated by coupling both L- and D-amino acids to (2S, 5R)-5-tert-butylproline and L-proline to generate, respectively, N-(acetyl)dipeptide N'-methylamides 1 and 2. Prolyl amide cis- and trans-isomers were, respectively, favored for peptides 1 and 2 as observed by proton NMR spectroscopy in water, DMSO and chloroform. The influence of solvent composition on amide proton chemical shift indicated an intramolecular hydrogen bond between the N'-methylamide proton and the acetamide carbonyl for the major conformer of dipeptides (S)-1, that became less favorable in (R)-1 and 2. The coupling constant (3J(NH,alpha)) values for the cis-isomer of (R)-1 indicated a phi2 dihedral angle value characteristic of a type VIb beta-turn conformation in solution. X-ray crystallographic analysis of N-acetyl-D-leucyl-5-tert-butylproline N'-methylamide (R)-lb showed the prolyl residue in a type VIb beta-turn geometry possessing an amide cis-isomer and psi3-dihedral angle having a value of 157 degrees, which precluded an intramolecular hydrogen bond. Intermolecular hydrogen bonding between the leucyl residues of two turn structures within the unit cell positioned the N-terminal residue in a geometry where their phi2 and psi2 dihedral angle values were not characteristic of an ideal type VIb turn. The circular dichroism spectra of tert-butylprolyl peptides (S)- and (R)-1b were found not to be influenced by changes in solvent composition from water to acetonitrile. The type B spectrum exhibited by (S)-1b has been previously assigned to a type VIa beta-turn conformation [Halab L, Lubell WD. J. Org. Chem. 1999; 64: 3312-3321]. The type C spectrum exhibited by the (R)-lb has previously been associated with type II' beta-turn and alpha-helical conformations in solution and appears now to be also characteristic for a type VIb geometry.  相似文献   

15.
The rebinding of CO to cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans in the fully reduced and in the half-reduced (mixed valence) form as a function of temperature was investigated using time-resolved rapid-scan FT-IR spectroscopy in the mid-IR (1200-2100 cm-1). For the fully reduced enzyme, rebinding was complete in approximately 2 s at 268 K and showed a biphasic reaction. At 84 K, nonreversible transfer of CO from heme a3 to CuB was observed. Both photolysis at 84 K and photolysis at 268 K result in FT-IR difference spectra which show similarities in the amide I, amide II, and heme modes. Both processes, however, differ in spectral features characteristic for amino acid side chain modes and may thus be indicative for the motional constraint of CO at low temperature. Rebinding of photodissociated CO for the mixed-valence enzyme at 268 K is also biphasic, but much slower as compared to the fully reduced enzyme. FT-IR difference spectra show band features similar to those for the fully reduced enzyme. Additional strong bands in the amide I and amide II range indicate local conformational changes induced by electron and coupled proton transfer. These signals disappear when the temperature is lowered to 84 K. At 268 K, a difference signal at 1746 cm-1 is observed which is shifted by 6 cm-1 to 1740 cm-1 in 2H2O. The absence of this signal for the mutant Glu 278 Gln allows assignment to the COOH stretching mode of Glu 278, and indicates changes of the conformation, proton position, or protonation of this residue upon electron transfer.  相似文献   

16.
Intramolecular hydrogen bonding in cardiolipin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy was used to determine whether intramolecular hydrogen bonding between the C-OH and P-OH groups exists in beef heart cardiolipin (CL) or in hydrogenated beef heart cardiolipin (18:0-CL) as compared to the synthetic 2'-deoxy analogue of cardiolipin (16:0-dCL). Such intramolecular hydrogen bonding would provide a structural basis for proton conduction on the molecular level. In aqueous dispersions at 20 degrees C, both 18:0-CL and 16:0-dCL exist in the gel phase as bilayers with gel to liquid-crystalline transitions (Tm) at 61 and 56 degrees C, respectively, whereas the unsaturated CL exists in the non-bilayer (hexagonal II) state. Evidence for intramolecular hydrogen bonding of the C-OH group in aqueous dispersions of 18:0-CL is provided by the large increase in Tm observed on changing the aqueous medium from H2O to D2O but specific hydrogen-bonded C-OH...PO2- species cannot be identified because water molecules also compete for the PO2- binding sites. However, C-OH...PO2- hydrogen bonds can be identified in dry films of the sodium salt of 18:0-CL or in CCl4 solution. In contrast, such hydrogen bonds cannot be formed in the deoxy analogue (16:0-dCL) indicating that the central C-OH group in 18:0-CL could provide a structural basis for proton conduction, involving the phosphate groups.  相似文献   

17.
W M Zuk  T B Freedman  L A Nafie 《Biopolymers》1989,28(11):2025-2044
The CH-stretching vibrational CD (VCD) spectra of glycyl-L-alanine, L-alanylglycine, and L-alanyl-L-alanine have been studied at neutral, high, and low pH in D2O solution. The intense positive VCD band attributed to the C alpha H stretch of the alanyl residue in glycyl-L-alanine at neutral pH is absent in L-alanylglycine. In contrast to the VCD spectra of L-alanine, the positive methine-stretching VCD band in glycyl-L-alanine and L-alanyl-L-alanine is still present at pH 2. Based on the ring current mechanism, the VCD spectra are consistent with the presence of a five-membered CO...HN intramolecular hydrogen-bonded ring between the C-terminal carboxylate and peptide NH groups at neutral and high pH; and a seven-membered COH...O = C hydrogen-bonded ring between the C-terminal carboxyl OH and peptide C = O groups at low pH. In the N-terminal alanyl residue, the peptide C = O group is hydrogen bonded to the NH trans to the methine bond. The CH-stretching VCD spectra of L-alanyl-L-alanyl-L-alanine at neutral pH are consistent with two intramolecularly hydrogen-bonded conformations for the central alanyl residue.  相似文献   

18.
Vibrational circular dichroism (VCD) spectroscopy was used to investigate the solution conformations of cyclosporins A, C, D, G, and H in CDCl(3), in the amide I and NH/OH-stretching regions, and their corresponding magnesium complexes in CD(3)CN, in the amide I region. VCD spectra are sensitive to the chiral arrangement of Cdbond;O and NH bonds in this cyclic undecapeptide. Calculations of molecular geometries, as well as IR and VCD intensities of model cyclosporin fragments that include the intramolecular hydrogen bonds of the crystal conformations of cyclosporins A and H (CsA and CsH), were carried out at the density functional theory (DFT; BPW91 functional/6-31G* basis set) level. The good agreement between IR and VCD spectra from experiment and DFT calculations provides evidence that the crystal conformation of CsA is dominant in CDCl(3) solution; CsH, however, assumes both an intramolecularly hydrogen-bonded crystal conformation and more open forms in solution. Comparisons of the experimental and calculated VCD spectra in the NH/OH-stretching region of the noncomplexed cyclosporins indicate that conformers with both free and hydrogen-bonded NH and OH groups are present in solution. Differences between the IR and VCD spectra for the metal-free and magnesium-complexed cyclosporins are indicative of strong interactions between cyclosporins and magnesium ions.  相似文献   

19.
This study report on the results of high resolution 1H n.m.r. investigations on Ac-Thr(alpha-GalNAc)-Ala-Ala-OMe 1 as a mucin type model glycopeptide of antifreeze glycoprotein (AFGP) in both dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and H2O. The temperature dependence of amide proton chemical shifts strongly suggested the presence of the intramolecular hydrogen bond between the amide proton of GalNAc and the carbonyl oxygen of the Thr residues. Due to this bond, the orientation of the sugar residue of 1 appears to be fairly restricted relative to its peptide backbone. Despite the lack of the clear evidence for such intramolecular hydrogen bond in H2O, 1H coupling constant data suggested the structural similarity of 1 in DMSO and H2O, indicating the presence of the intramolecular hydrogen bond even in H2O, which may play an important role in determining the orientation of the sugar moiety with respect to the peptide backbone in glycoprotein.  相似文献   

20.
A structural feature of aureobasidins, cyclic depsipeptide antibiotics produced by Aureobasidium pullulans R106, is the N-methylation of four out of seven amide bonds. In order to investigate possible relationship between the molecular conformation and the amide N-methylation, aureobasidin A (AbA), which exhibits the potent antifungal activity, was subjected to X-ray crystal analysis. The crystal, recrystallized from ether (orthorhombic, space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), a = 21.643 (3) A, b = 49.865(10) A, c = 12.427 (1) A, z= 8), contained two independent conformers per asymmetric unit and they took on a similar arrowhead-like conformation. The conformation consisted of three secondary structures of antiparallel beta-sheet, and beta- and gamma-turns, and was stabilized by three intramolecular and transannular N-H O=C hydrogen bonds. The beta-hydroxy-N-methyl-l-valine residue, which is indispensable for its bioactivity, was located at the tip of the corner. Since a nearly identical conformation has been observed for aureobasidin E, a related cyclic depsipeptide, this arrowhead-like conformation may be energetically stable and important for biological activity. The contribution of the amide N-methylation to the conformation was investigated by model building and energy calculations. The energy-minimizations of AbA analogs, in which some (one to four) of four N-methylated amide bonds were replaced with usual amide bond, led to some conformers which are fairly different from the arrowhead form of AbA, although they are stabilized by three intramolecular N-H...O=C hydrogen bonds. This result explains the reason why four out of the seven amide bonds have to be methylated to manifest biological activity, i.e. the high N-methylation of aureobasidin is necessary to form only one well-defined conformation.  相似文献   

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