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1.
DKP formation is a serious side reaction during the solid‐phase synthesis of peptide acids containing either Pro or Gly at the C‐terminus. This side reaction not only leads to a lower overall yield, but also to the presence in the reaction crude of several deletion peptides lacking the first amino acids. For the preparation of protected peptides using the Fmoc/tBu strategy, the use of a ClTrt‐Cl‐resin with a limited incorporation of the C‐terminal amino acid is the method of choice. The use of resins with higher loading levels leads to more impure peptide crudes. The use of HPLC‐ESMS is a useful method for analysing complex samples, such as those formed when C‐terminal Pro peptides are prepared by non‐optimized solid‐phase strategies. Copyright © 1999 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

2.
A series of Fmoc‐Phe(4‐aza‐C60)‐OH of fullerene amino acid derived peptides have been prepared by solid phase peptide synthesis, in which the terminal amino acid, Phe(4‐aza‐C60)‐OH, is derived from the dipolar addition to C60 of the Fmoc‐Nα‐protected azido amino acids derived from phenylalanine: Fmoc‐Phe(4‐aza‐C60)‐Lys3‐OH ( 1 ), Fmoc‐Phe(4‐aza‐C60)‐Pro‐Hyp‐Lys‐OH ( 2 ), and Fmoc‐Phe(4‐aza‐C60)‐Hyp‐Hyp‐Lys‐OH ( 3 ). The inhibition constant of our fullerene aspartic protease PRIs utilized FRET‐based assay to evaluate the enzyme kinetics of HIV‐1 PR at various concentrations of inhibitors. Simulation of the docking of the peptide Fmoc‐Phe‐Pro‐Hyp‐Lys‐OH overestimated the inhibition, while the amino acid PRIs were well estimated. The experimental results show that C60‐based amino acids are a good base structure in the design of protease inhibitors and that their inhibition can be improved upon by the addition of designer peptide sequences. Copyright © 2015 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

3.
Structures of (Pro‐Pro‐Gly)4‐Xaa‐Yaa‐Gly‐(Pro‐Pro‐Gly)4 (ppg9‐XYG) where (Xaa, Yaa) = (Pro, Hyp), (Hyp, Pro) or (Hyp, Hyp) were analyzed at high resolution using synchrotron radiation. Molecular and crystal structures of these peptides are very similar to those of the (Pro‐Pro‐Gly)9 peptide. The results obtained in this study, together with those obtained from related compounds, indicated the puckering propensity of the Hyp in the X position: (1) Hyp(X) residues involved in the Hyp(X):Pro(Y) stacking pairs prefer the down‐puckering conformation, as in ppg9‐OPG, and ppg9‐OOG; (2) Hyp(X) residues involved in the Hyp(X):Hyp(Y) stacking pairs prefer the up‐puckering conformation if there is no specific reason to adopt the down‐puckering conformation. Water molecules in these peptide crystals are classified into two groups, the 1st and 2nd hydration waters. Water molecules in the 1st hydration group have direct hydrogen bonds with peptide oxygen atoms, whereas those in the 2nd hydration group do not. Compared with globular proteins, the number of water molecules in the 2nd hydration shell of the ppg9‐XYG peptides is very large, likely due to the unique rod‐like molecular structure of collagen model peptides. In the collagen helix, the amino acid residues in the X and Y positions must protrude outside of the triple helix, which forces even the hydrophobic side chains, such as Pro, to be exposed to the surrounding water molecules. Therefore, most of the waters in the 2nd hydration shell are covering hydrophobic Pro side chains by forming clathrate structures. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 91: 361–372, 2009. This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The “Published Online” date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com  相似文献   

4.
Collagens have long been believed to adopt a triple‐stranded molecular structure with a 10/3 symmetry (ten triplet units in three turns) and an axial repeat of 29 Å. This belief even persisted after an alternative structure with a 7/2 symmetry (seven triplet units in two turns) with an axial repeat of 20 Å had been proposed. The uncertainty regarding the helical symmetry of collagens is attributed to inadequate X‐ray fiber diffraction data. Therefore, for better understanding of the collagen helix, single‐crystal analyses of peptides with simplified characteristic amino acid sequences and similar compositions to collagens have long been awaited. Here we report the crystal structure of (Gly‐Pro‐Hyp)9 peptide at a resolution of 1.45 Å. The repeating unit of this peptide, Gly‐Pro‐Hyp, is the most typical sequence present in collagens, and it has been used as a basic repeating unit in fiber diffraction analyses of collagen. The (Gly‐Pro‐Hyp)9 peptide adopts a triple‐stranded structure with an average helical symmetry close to the ideal 7/2 helical model for collagen. This observation strongly suggests that the average molecular structure of collagen is not the accepted Rich and Crick 10/3 helical model but is a 7/2 helical conformation. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 97: 607–616, 2012.  相似文献   

5.
The collagen triple helix has a larger accessible surface area per molecular mass than globular proteins, and therefore potentially more water interaction sites. The effect of deuterium oxide on the stability of collagen model peptides and Type I collagen molecules was analyzed by circular dichroism and differential scanning calorimetry. The transition temperatures (Tm) of the protonated peptide (Pro‐Pro‐Gly)10 were 25.4 and 28.7°C in H2O and D2O, respectively. The increase of the Tm of (Pro‐Pro‐Gly)10 measured calorimetrically at 1.0°C min?1 in a low pH solution from the protonated to the deuterated solvent was 5.1°C. The increases of the Tm for (Gly‐Pro‐4(R)Hyp)9 and pepsin‐extracted Type I collagen were measured as 4.2 and 2.2°C, respectively. These results indicated that the increase in the Tm in the presence of D2O is comparable to that of globular proteins, and much less than reported previously for collagen model peptides [Gough and Bhatnagar, J Biomol Struct Dyn 1999, 17, 481–491]. These experimental results suggest that the interaction of water molecules with collagen is similar to the interaction of water with globular proteins, when the ratio of collagen to water is very small and collagen is monomerically dispersed in the solvent. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 93: 93–101, 2010. This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The “Published Online” date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com  相似文献   

6.
Growing interest in synthetic peptides carrying post‐traslational modifications, in general, and the Amadori modification in particular, raises the need for specific building blocks that can be used in stepwise peptide synthesis. Herein, we report the synthesis of Nα‐Fmoc‐Lys‐OH derivatives containing Nε‐1‐deoxyfructopyranosyl moiety. Copyright © 2008 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

7.
Representative members of a group of linear, N‐acylated polypeptide antibiotics (peptaibols) containing α‐aminoisobutyric acid (Aib) and, in part, isovaline (Iva), as well as proteinogenic amino acids and a C‐terminal‐bonded 2‐amino alcohol, were treated with anhydrous trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) at 37° for 0.5–26 h. The resulting fragments were separated by HPLC and characterized by electrospray ionization collision‐induced dissociation mass spectrometry (ESI‐CID‐MS). The following 16–20‐residue peptaibols were investigated: natural, microheterogeneous mixtures of antiamoebins and alamethicin F50, uniform paracelsin A, and synthetic trichotoxin A50/E. In the natural peptides, bonds formed between Aib (Iva) and Pro (Hyp) were rapidly and selectively cleaved within 0.5 h. Furthermore, TFA esters of the C‐terminal amino alcohols were formed. Depending on time, release of C‐terminal tri‐ and tetrapeptides as well as amino acids from the major fragments was observed. Synthetic homooligopeptides, namely Z‐ and Ac‐(Aib)10‐OtBu and Z‐(Aib)7‐OtBu, were analyzed for comparison. On treatment with TFA, a regular series of Z‐(Aib)10–5‐OH from Z‐(Aib)10‐OtBu were detected within 0.5 h, and, after 3 h, release of a regular series of Z‐(Aib)7–3‐OH from Z‐(Aib)7‐OtBu were observed. Moreover, concomitant release of the series of H‐(Aib)10–3‐OH from the decapeptide occurred. From these data, a repetitive cleavage mechanism via intermediate formation of C‐terminal oxazolones on trifluoroacetolysis is proposed. Furthermore, their formation and stability in native peptaibols are correlated with subtle structural differences in protein amino acids linked to Aib. From the conspicuous concordance of the formation and abundance of regular series of trifluoroacetolytic fragments and of positive ions of the b‐series in CID‐MS, the generation of intermediate oxazolonium ions in both gas and liquid phase is concluded.  相似文献   

8.
The single‐crystal structure of the collagen‐like peptide (Pro‐Pro‐Gly)4‐Hyp‐Asp‐Gly‐(Pro‐Pro‐Gly)4, was analyzed at 1.02 Å resolution. The overall average helical twist (θ = 49.6°) suggests that this peptide adopts a 7/2 triple‐helical structure and that its conformation is very similar to that of (Gly‐Pro‐Hyp)9, which has the typical repeating sequence in collagen. High‐resolution studies on other collagen‐like peptides have shown that imino acid‐rich sequences preferentially adopt a 7/2 triple‐helical structure (θ = 51.4°), whereas imino acid‐lean sequences adopt relaxed conformations (θ < 51.4°). The guest Gly‐Hyp‐Asp sequence in the present peptide, however, has a large helical twist (θ = 61.1°), whereas that of the host Pro‐Pro‐Gly sequence is small (θ = 46.7°), indicating that the relationship between the helical conformation and the amino acid sequence of such peptides is complex. In the present structure, a strong intermolecular hydrogen bond between two Asp residues on the A and B strands might induce the large helical twist of the guest sequence; this is compensated by a reduced helical twist in the host, so that an overall 7/2‐helical symmetry is maintained. The Asp residue in the C strand might interact electrostatically with the N‐terminus of an adjacent molecule, causing axial displacement, reminiscent of the D‐staggered structure in fibrous collagens. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 99: 436–447, 2013.  相似文献   

9.
The standard collagen triple‐helix requires a perfect (Gly‐Xaa‐Yaa)n sequence, yet all nonfibrillar collagens contain interruptions in this tripeptide repeating pattern. Defining the structural consequences of disruptions in the sequence pattern may shed light on the biological role of sequence interruptions, which have been suggested to play a role in molecular flexibility, collagen degradation, and ligand binding. Previous studies on model peptides with 1‐ and 4‐residue interruptions showed a localized perturbation within the triple‐helix, and this work is extended to introduce natural collagen interruptions up to nine residue in length within a fixed (Gly‐Pro‐Hyp)n peptide context. All peptides in this set show decreases in triple‐helix content and stability, with greater conformational perturbations for the interruptions longer than five residue. The most stable and least perturbed structure is seen for the 5‐residue interruption peptide, whose sequence corresponds to a Gly to Ala missense mutation, such as those leading to collagen genetic diseases. The triple‐helix peptides containing 8‐ and 9‐residue interruptions exhibit a strong propensity for self‐association to fibrous structures. In addition, a small peptide modeling only the 9‐residue sequence within the interruption aggregates to form amyloid‐like fibrils with antiparallel β‐sheet structure. The 8‐ and 9‐residue interruption sequences studied here are predicted to have significant cross‐β aggregation potential, and a similar propensity is reported for ~10% of other naturally occurring interruptions. The presence of amyloidogenic sequences within or between triple‐helix domains may play a role in molecular association to normal tissue structures and could participate in observed interactions between collagen and amyloid.  相似文献   

10.
Relative intensities of main resonance high-resolution 13C NMR spectra of acid hydrolysis products of bovine skin and human aortic collagens were measured. The contents of Gly, Pro, Hyp amino acid residues and Gly-Pro-Y triplets in collagen peptides was estimated. A good agreement between the experimental and theoretical data of the analysis of amino acid sequences of bovine skin collagen was shown.  相似文献   

11.
This work reports an efficient Lewis acid catalysed N‐methylation procedure of lipophilic α‐amino acid methyl esters in solution phase. The developed methodology involves the use of the reagent system AlCl3/diazomethane as methylating agent and α‐amino acid methyl esters protected on the amino function with the (9H‐fluoren‐9‐yl)methanesulfonyl (Fms) group. The removal of Fms protecting group is achieved under the same conditions to those used for Fmoc removal. Thus the Fms group can be interchangeable with the Fmoc group in the synthesis of N‐methylated peptides using standard Fmoc‐based strategies. Finally, the absence of racemization during the methylation reaction and the removal of Fms group were demonstrated by synthesising a pair of diastereomeric dipeptides. Copyright © 2015 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

12.
Structural modification of the peptide backbone via N‐methylation is a powerful tool to modulate the pharmacokinetic profile and biological activity of peptides. Here we describe a rapid and highly efficient microwave(MW)‐assisted Fmoc/tBu solid‐phase method to prepare short chain N‐methyl‐rich peptides, using Rink amide p‐methylbenzhydrylamine (MBHA) resin as solid‐phase support. This method produces peptides in high yield and purity, and reduces the time required for Fmoc‐N‐methyl amino acid coupling. Copyright © 2010 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

13.
We have been engaged in the microwave‐solid phase peptide synthesis (SPPS) synthesis of the phenylglycine (Phg)‐containing pentapeptide H‐Ala‐Val‐Pro‐Phg‐Tyr‐NH2 (1) previously demonstrated to bind to the so‐called BIR3 domain of the anti‐apoptotic protein XIAP. Analysis of the target peptide by a combination of RP‐HPLC, ESI‐MS, and NMR revealed the presence of two diastereoisomers arising out of the racemisation of the Phg residue, with the percentage of the LLLDL component assessed as 49%. We performed the synthesis of peptide (1) using different microwave and conventional stepwise SPPS conditions in attempts to reduce the level of racemisation of the Phg residue and to determine at which part of the synthetic cycle the epimerization had occurred. We determined that racemisation occurred mainly during the Fmoc‐group removal and, to a much lesser extent, during activation/coupling of the Fmoc‐Phg‐OH residue. We were able to obtain the desired peptide with a 71% diastereomeric purity (29% LLLDL as impurity) by utilizing microwave‐assisted SPPS at 50 °C and power 22 Watts, when the triazine‐derived coupling reagent DMTMM‐BF4 was used, together with NMM as an activator base, for the incorporation of this residue and 20% piperidine as an Fmoc‐deprotection base. In contrast, the phenylalanine analogue of the above peptide, H‐Ala‐Val‐Pro‐Phe‐Tyr‐NH2 (2), was always obtained as a single diastereoisomer by using a range of standard coupling and deprotection conditions. Our findings suggest that the racemisation of Fmoc‐Phg‐OH, under both microwave‐SPPS and stepwise conventional SPPS syntheses conditions, is very facile but can be limited through the use of the above stated conditions. Copyright © 2012 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

14.
In our efforts to develop a universal solution to the problem of aspartimide formation in Fmoc SPPS, we investigated the application of our new β‐trialkylmethyl protected aspartic acid building blocks to the synthesis of peptides containing the Asp‐Gly motif. The Nα‐Fmoc aspartic acid β‐tri‐(ethyl/propyl/butyl)methyl esters were used in the synthesis of the classic model peptide scorpion toxin II (VKDGYI), and their effectiveness in minimising aspartimide formation during extended piperidine treatments was evaluated. Furthermore, we compared their efficacy against that of the commonly used approach of adding acids to the Fmoc deprotection solution. Finally, we applied our aspartic acid building blocks to the stepwise Fmoc SPPS of teduglutide, a human GLP‐2 analogue, whose synthesis is made challenging by extensive aspartimide formation. In all experiments, our approach led to almost complete reduction of aspartimide formation with accompanied suppression of aspartic acid epimerisation. Copyright © 2016 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

15.
Parmar AS  Nunes AM  Baum J  Brodsky B 《Biopolymers》2012,97(10):795-806
Type XXV collagen, or collagen‐like amyloidogenic component, is a component of amyloid plaques, and recent studies suggest this collagen affects amyloid fibril elongation and has a genetic association with Alzheimer's disease. The relationship between the collagen triple helix and amyloid fibrils was investigated by studying peptide models, including a very stable triple helical peptide (Pro‐Hyp‐Gly)10, an amyloidogenic peptide GNNQQNY, and a hybrid peptide where the GNNQQNY sequence was incorporated between (GPO)n domains. Circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy showed the GNNQQNY peptide formed a random coil structure, whereas the hybrid peptide contained a central disordered GNNQQNY region transitioning to triple‐helical ends. Light scattering confirmed the GNNQQNY peptide had a high propensity to form amyloid fibrils, whereas amyloidogenesis was delayed in the hybrid peptide. NMR data suggested the triple‐helix constraints on the GNNQQNY sequence within the hybrid peptide may disfavor the conformational change necessary for aggregation. Independent addition of a triple‐helical peptide to the GNNQQNY peptide under aggregating conditions delayed nucleation and amyloid fibril growth. The inhibition of amyloid nucleation depended on the Gly‐Xaa‐Yaa sequence and required the triple‐helix conformation. The inhibitory effect of the collagen triple‐helix on an amyloidogenic sequence, when in the same molecule or when added separately, suggests Type XXV collagen, and possibly other collagens, may play a role in regulating amyloid fibril formation. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 97: 795–806, 2012.  相似文献   

16.
We have observed that the rate of folding of the enzymatically hydroxylated form of poly(Gly-Pro-Pro) into the triple-helical conformation is considerably higher than that of the unhydroxylated polypeptide [R. K. Chopra and V. S. Ananthanarayanan (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 79 , 7180–7184]. In this study, we examine a plausible kinetic pathway for triple-helix formation by selecting peptide models for the unhydroxylated collagen molecule, and computing their conformational energies before and after proline hydroxylation. Starting with the available data on the preferred conformations of proline- and hydroxyproline-containing peptide sequences, energy minimization was carried out on the following pairs of peptides: Gly-Ala-Pro-Gly-Ala and Gly-Ala-Hyp-Gly-Ala; Gly-Pro-Pro-Gly-Ala and Gly-Pro-Hyp-Gly-Ala; Gly-Ala-Pro-Gly-Ala-Pro and Gly-Ala-Hyp-Gly-Ala-Hyp. It was found that, with each pair of peptides, the energetically most favorable conformation (I) has an extended structure at the Gly-Ala or Gly-Pro segment and a β-bend at the Pro-Gly or Hyp-Gly segment. In the Hyp-containing peptides, this conformation is further stabilized by a (Hypi + 2)OH…OC(Glyi) hydrogen bond. Conformation I is lower in energy by about 6–13 kcal/mol of the peptide than the fully extended conformations that resemble the single collagen polypeptide chain and contain no intramolecular hydrogen bond. In contrast to the proline counterpart, the hydroxyproline-containing peptides are found capable of adopting a partially extended conformation that does not contain the β-bend but retains the (Hyp)OH…OC(Gly) hydrogen bond. The energy of this conformation is intermediate between conformation I and the fully extended conformation. The continuation of the β-bend along the chain is restricted by stereochemical constraints that are more severe in the latter two pairs of peptides than in the first pair. Such a restriction may be considered to trigger the “unbending” of the minimum energy conformation leading to its straightening into the fully extended conformation; the latter, in turn, would lead to triple-helix formation through favorable interchain interactions. We propose that the partially extended conformation in the Hyp-containing peptides could serve as a kinetic intermediate on the way to forming the fully extended conformation. Because of the (Hypi + 2)OH…OC(Glyi) hydrogen bond, this conformation would also serve to lock the trans geometry at the Gly-Ala(Pro) and Ala(Pro)-Hyp peptide bonds, thereby enhancing the rate of their helix formation. A scheme for collagen folding in proposed on the basis of these results.  相似文献   

17.
The 4‐methoxybenzyloxymethyl (MBom) group was introduced at the Nπ‐position of the histidine (His) residue by using a regioselective procedure, and its utility was examined under standard conditions used for the conventional and the microwave (MW)‐assisted solid phase peptide synthesis (SPPS) with 9‐fluorenylmethyoxycarbonyl (Fmoc) chemistry. The Nπ‐MBom group fulfilling the requirements for the Fmoc strategy was found to prevent side‐chain‐induced racemization during incorporation of the His residue even in the case of MW‐assisted SPPS performed at a high temperature. In particular, the MBom group proved to be a suitable protecting group for the convergent synthesis because it remains attached to the imidazole ring during detachment of the protected His‐containing peptide segments from acid‐sensitive linkers by treatment with a weak acid such as 1% trifluoroacetic acid in dichloromethane. We also demonstrated the facile synthesis of Fmoc‐His(π‐MBom)‐OH with the aid of purification procedure by crystallization to effectively remove the undesired τ‐isomer without resorting to silica gel column chromatography. This means that the present synthetic procedure can be used for large‐scale production without any obstacles. Copyright © 2012 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

18.
To prevent aspartimide formation and related side products in Asp‐Xaa, particularly Asp‐Gly‐containing peptides, usually the 2‐hydroxy‐4‐methoxybenzyl (Hmb) backbone amide protection is applied for peptide synthesis according to the Fmoc‐protocols. In the present study, the usefulness of the recently proposed acid‐labile dicyclopropylmethyl (Dcpm) protectant was analyzed. Despite the significant steric hindrance of this bulky group, N‐terminal H‐(Dcpm)Gly‐peptides are quantitatively acylated by potent acylating agents, and alternatively the dipeptide Fmoc‐Asp(OtBu)‐(Dcpm)Gly‐OH derivative can be used as a building block. In contrast to the Hmb group, Dcpm is inert toward acylations, but is readily removed in the acid deprotection and resin‐cleavage step. Copyright © 2009 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

19.
We have recorded high-resolution 13C-nmr spectra of collagen fibrils in the solid state by the cross-polarization–magic-angle-spinning(CP–MAS)method and analyzed the spectra with reference to those of collagenlike polypeptides. We used two kinds of model polypeptides to obtain reference 13C chemical shifts of major amino acid residues of collagen (Gly, Pro, Ala, and Hyp): the 31-helical polypeptides [(Gly)nII, (Pro)nII, (Hyp)n, and (Ala? Gly? Gly)nII], and the triple-helical polypeptides [(Pro? Gly? Pro)n and (Pro? Ala? Gly)n]. Examination of the 13C chemical shifts of these polypeptides, together with our previous data, showed that the 13C chemical shifts of individual amino acid residues are the same, within experimental error (±0.5 ppm), among different polypeptides with different primary sequences, if the conformations are the same. We found that the 13C chemical shifts of Ala residues of the 31-helical (Ala? Gly? Gly)n and triple-helical (Pro? Ala? Gly)n are significantly displaced, compared with those of the α-helix, β-sheet, and silk I form, and can be utilized as excellent probes to examine conformational features of collagen-like polypeptides. Further, the 13C chemical shifts of Gly and Pro residues in the triple-helical polypeptides are substantially displaced from those found in (Gly)nII and (Pro)nII of the 31-helix, reflecting further conformational change from the 31-helix to the supercoiled triple helix. In particular, the 13C chemical shifts of Gly C ? O carbons of the triple-helical polypeptides are substantially displaced upfield (4.1–5.1 ppm), with respect to those of the 31-helical polypeptides. These displacements are interpreted by that Gly C ? O of the former is not involved in NH …? O ? C hydrogen bonds, while this carbon of the latter is linked by these kinds of hydrogen bonds. On the basis of these 13C chemical shifts, as reference data for the collagenlike structure, we were able to assign the 13C-nmr peaks of Gly, Ala, Pro, and Hyp residues of collagen fibrils, which are in good agreement with the values expected from the model polypeptides mentioned above. We also discuss a plausible conformational change of collagen fibrils during denaturation.  相似文献   

20.
The crystal structure of the triple‐helical peptide (Pro‐Hyp‐Gly)3‐Pro‐Arg‐Gly‐(Pro‐Hyp‐Gly)4 (POG3‐PRG‐POG4) was determined at 1.45 Å resolution. POG3‐PRG‐POG4 was designed to permit investigation of the side‐chain conformation of the Arg residues in a triple‐helical structure. Because of the alternative structure of one of three Arg residues, four side‐chain conformations were observed in an asymmetric unit. Among them, three adopt a ttg?t conformation and the other adopts a tg?g?t conformation. A statistical analysis of 80 Arg residues in various triple‐helical peptides showed that, unlike those in globular proteins, they preferentially adopt a tt conformation for χ1 and χ2, as observed in POG3‐PRG‐POG4. This conformation permits van der Waals contacts between the side‐chain atoms of Arg and the main‐chain atoms of the adjacent strand in the same molecule. Unlike many other host–guest peptides, in which there is a significant difference between the helical twists in the guest and the host peptides, POG3‐PRG‐POG4 shows a marked difference between the helical twists in the N‐terminal peptide and those in the C‐terminal peptide, separated near the Arg residue. This suggested that the unique side‐chain conformation of the Arg residue affects not only the conformation of the guest peptide, but also the conformation of the peptide away from the Arg residue. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 101: 1000–1009, 2014.  相似文献   

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