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1.
Pallaghy PK  Norton RS 《Biopolymers》2000,54(3):173-179
Contryphan-R, from venom of the cone-shell Conus radiatus, represents a novel cyclic peptide scaffold onto which residues may be grafted to mimic unrelated protein surfaces. Three substitutions were made at the x and X positions of the disulfide-bridged motif CPxXPXC, where X and x represent any L- and D-handed residues, respectively, P represents proline or hydroxyproline, and C a half-cystine. These substitutions were designed to mimic part of the pharmacophore of the unrelated globular polypeptide omega-conotoxin GVIA, which blocks N-type calcium channels. The structure of this engineered contryphan, YNK-contryphan-R ([D-Tyr4, Asn5, Lys7]contryphan-R), is shown to be similar to that of native contryphan-R (Pallaghy et al., Biochemistry, 1999, Vol. 38, pp. 13553-13559), confirming that the scaffold is robust with respect to the multiple substitutions. In particular, the alpha-beta bond vectors characterising the orientation of the side chains relative to the backbone are similar in contryphan-R, YNK-contryphan-R, and omega-conotoxin GVIA, which is the required result for a scaffold-based approach to molecular design. The solution structure of YNK-contryphan-R has an N-terminal, nonhydrogen-bonded, chain reversal centered on Hyp3-D-Trp4, and a C-terminal type I beta-turn. A minor form due to cis-trans isomerism of the Hyp2-Cys3 peptide bond is present in YNK-contryphan-R in a larger proportion than in contryphan-R. It is evident, particularly from the (3)J(HalphaHN) coupling constants, that YNK-contryphan-R is more flexible than contryphan-R, probably due to the absence in YNK-contryphan-R of the Pro-Trp packing present in the native molecule. Nevertheless, the structure confirms that cyclic peptide molecular designs can achieve the intended conformations.  相似文献   

2.
Meng HY  Thomas KM  Lee AE  Zondlo NJ 《Biopolymers》2006,84(2):192-204
Cis-trans isomerization of amide bonds plays critical roles in protein molecular recognition, protein folding, protein misfolding, and disease. Aromatic-proline sequences are particularly prone to exhibit cis amide bonds. The roles of residues adjacent to a tyrosine-proline residue pair on cis-trans isomerism were examined. A short series of peptides XYPZ was synthesized and cis-trans isomerism was analyzed. Based on these initial studies, a series of peptides XYPN, X = all 20 canonical amino acids, was synthesized and analyzed by NMR for i residue effects on cis-trans isomerization. The following effects were observed: (a) aromatic residues immediately preceding Tyr-Pro disfavor cis amide bonds, with K(trans/cis)= 5.7-8.0, W > Y > F; (b) proline residues preceding Tyr-Pro lead to multiple species, exhibiting cis-trans isomerization of either or both X-Pro amide bonds; and (c) other residues exhibit similar values of K(trans/cis) (= 2.9-4.2), with Thr and protonated His exhibiting the highest fraction cis. beta-Branched and short polar residues were somewhat more favorable in stabilizing the cis conformation. Phosphorylation of serine at the i position modestly increases the stability of the cis conformer. In addition, the effect of the i+3 residue was examined in a limited series of peptides TYPZ. NMR data indicated that aromatic residues, Pro, Asn, Ala, and Val at the i+3 residue all favor cis amide bonds, with aromatic residues and Asn favoring more compact phi at Tyr(cis) and Ala and Pro favoring more extended phi at Tyr(cis). D-Alanine at the i+3 position particularly disfavors cis amide bonds.  相似文献   

3.
The conformations of the dipeptide t-Boc-Pro-DAla-OH and the tripeptide t-Boc-Pro-DAla-Ala-OH have been determined in the crystalline state by X-ray diffraction and in solution by CD, n.m.r. and i.r. techniques. The unit cell of the dipeptide crystal contains two independent molecules connected by intermolecular hydrogen bonds. The urethane-proline peptide bond is in the cis orientation in both the molecular forms while the peptide bond between Pro and DAla is in the trans orientation. The single dipeptide molecule exhibits a "bent" structure which approximates to a partial beta-turn. The tripeptide adopts the 4----1 hydrogen-bonded type II beta-turn with all trans peptide bonds. In solution, the CD and i.r. data on the dipeptide indicate an ordered conformation with an intramolecular hydrogen bond. N.m.r. data indicate a significant proportion of the conformer with a trans orientation at the urethane-proline peptide bond. The temperature coefficient of the amide proton of this conformer in DMSO-d6 points to a 3----1 intramolecular hydrogen bond. Taken together, the data on the dipeptide in solution indicate the presence (in addition to the cis conformer) of a C7 conformation which is absent in the crystalline state. The spectral data on the tripeptide indicate the presence of the type II beta-turn in solution in addition to the nonhydrogen-bonded conformer with the cis peptide bond between the urethane and proline residues. The relevance of these data to studies on the substrate specificity of collagen prolylhydroxylase is pointed out.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
In the present paper we describe the solution nmr structural analysis and restrained molecular dynamic simulation of the cyclic pentapeptide cyclo-(Pro-Phe-Phe-β-Ala-β-Ala). The conformational analysis carried out in CD3CN and dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) solutions by nmr spectroscopy was based on interproton distances derived from rotating frame nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy spectra and homonuclear coupling constants. A restrained molecular dynamic simulation in vacuo was also performed to build refined molecular models. The molecule is present in both solvent systems as two slowly interconverting conformers, characterized by a cis-trans isomerism around the β-Ala5-Pro1 peptide bond. In CD3CN solution, the conformer with a cis peptide bond is quite similar to that observed in the solid state, while the conformer containing all trans peptide bonds is characterized by an intramolecular hydrogen bond stabilizing a C10- and a C13-ring structure. In DMSO solution, the trans isomer is partly similar to that observed in CD3CN solution while the cis isomer is different from that observed in the solid state. The effect of the solvent in stabilizing different conformations was also investigated in DMSO-CD3CN solvent mixtures. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

6.
Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy has been used to investigate a synthetic peptide (YVYKPNNTHE) corresponding to residues 113 to 122 of staphylococcal nuclease. In the major folded state of the protein this region forms a type VIa beta-turn containing a cis Lys116-Pro117 peptide bond. There is, however, no evidence for any significant population of such a turn in the peptide in aqueous solution and the X-Pro bond is predominantly in the trans configuration. The peptide exhibits several well-resolved minor resonances due to the presence of a small fraction (4 +/- 2%) of the cis-proline isomer. The ratio of cis to trans isomer populations was found to be independent of temperature between 5 degrees C and 70 degrees C, indicating that delta H for the isomerism is close to zero. Using magnetization transfer techniques the rate of trans to cis interconversion was found to be 0.025(+/- 0.013) s-1 at 50 degrees C. The thermodynamics and kinetics of isomerism in the peptide are very similar to those estimated for the Lys116-Pro117 peptide bond in unfolded nuclease, suggesting that the cis-trans equilibrium in the unfolded protein is largely determined by the residues adjacent to Pro117 in the sequence. These results are consistent with previous suggestions that the cis-proline bond is stabilized late in the folding process and that the predominance of the cis form in folded nuclease is due to stabilizing interactions within the protein that give rise to a favorable enthalpy term.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
A systematic comparison is made between experimental and computational data gained on vicinal disulfide bridges in proteins and peptides. Structural and stability data of ab initio and density functional theory (DFT) calculations on the model compound 4,5-ditiaheptano-7-lactam and the model peptide HCO-ox-[Cys-Cys]-NH2 at RHF/3-21G*, B3LYP/6-31+G(d), and B3LYP/6-311++G(d,p) levels of theory are presented. The data on Xxx-Cys-Cys-Yyy type amino acid sequence units retrieved from PDB SELECT, along with data on sequence units that have vicinal disulfide bridge, taken from the Brookhaven Protein Data Bank, are conformationally characterized. Amino acid backbone conformations, cis-trans isomerism of the amide bond between the two cysteine residues, and ring puckering are studied. Ring puckers are characterized by their relation to the conformers of the parent 4,5-ditiaheptano-7-lactam. Computational precision and accuracy are proved by frequency calculation and solvent model optimization on selected conformers. It is found that the ox-[Cys-Cys] unit is able to accept types I, II, VIa, VIb, and VIII beta-turn structures.  相似文献   

9.
Proton nmr parameters are reported for DMSO-d6 solutions of two receptor-selective substance P analogues: Ac[Arg6,Pro9]SP6-11, which is selective for the NK-1 (SP-P) receptor and [pGlu6,N-MePhe8]SP6-11, which selectively activates the NK-3 (SP-N) receptor. Full peak assignments of both analogues were obtained by COSY experiments. The chemical shifts, coupling constants, and temperature coefficients of amide proton chemical shifts as well as NOESY effects and calculated side-chain rotamer populations of Phe side chains are reported for both peptides. Analysis of coupling constants and temperature coefficients together with the nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy effects suggest that Ac[Arg6,Pro9]SP6-11 has a trans configuration about the Phe8-Pro9 amide bond and the preferred conformation of this analogue has a type I beta-turn. The nmr data for [pGlu6,N-MePhe8]SP6-11 suggest that this peptide exists as a mixture of cis-trans isomers in which the cis isomer can preferably adopt a type VI beta-turn conformation, and the trans isomer can adopt a gamma-turn conformation. There are indications that the two last turns are stabilized by a hydrogen bond between the syn carboxamide proton and the pGlu ring carbonyl.  相似文献   

10.
The conformational cis-trans equilibrium around the peptide bond in model tripeptides has been determined by 2D NMR methods (HOHAHA, ROESY). The study was limited to three different N-substituted amino acids in position 2, namely Pro (proline), Tic (1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline-3-carboxylic acid), and N-MePhe (N-methylphenylalanine). In all cases the amino acid in position 1 was tyrosine and in position 3, phenylalanine. The results of our studies show that the cis-trans ratio depends mostly on the configuration of the amino acids forming the peptide bond undergoing the cis-trans isomerisation. The amino acid following the sequence (in position 3) does not have much influence on the cis-trans isomerisation, indicating that there is no interaction of the side chains between these amino acids. The model peptides with the L-Tyr-L-AA-(L- or D-)Phe (where AA is N-substituted amino acid) chiralities give 80–100% more of the cis form in comparison to the corresponding peptides with the D-Tyr-L-AA-(L-or D-)Phe chiralities. These results indicate that the incorporation of N-substituted amino acids in small peptides with the same chirality as the precedent amino acid involved in the peptide bond undergoing the cis/trans isomerisation moves the equilibrium to a significant amount of the cis form.  相似文献   

11.
The solution conformations of two potent antagonists of bradykinin (Arg1-Pro2-Pro3-Gly4-Phe5-Ser6-Pro7-Phe8-Arg9), [Aca(-1),DArg0,Hyp3,Thi5,DPhe7,(N-Bzl)Gly8]BK (1) and [Aaa(-1),DArg0,Hyp3,Thi5,(2-DNal)7,Thi8]BK (2), were studied by using 2D NMR spectroscopy in DMSO-d6 and molecular dynamics simulations. The NMR spectra of peptide 1 reveals the existence of at least two isomers arising from isomerization across the DPhe7-(N-Bzl)Gly8 peptide bond. The more populated isomer possesses the cis peptide bond at this position. The ratio of cis/trans isomers amounted to 7:3. With both antagonists, the NMR data indicate a beta-turn structure for the Hyp3-Gly4 residues. In addition, for peptide 2, position 2,3 is likely to be occupied by turn-like structures. The cis peptide bond between DPhe7 and (N-Bzl)Gly8 in analogue 1 suggests type VI beta-turn at position 7,8. The molecular dynamics runs were performed on both peptides in DMSO solution. The results indicate that the structure of peptide 1 is characterized by type VIb beta-turn comprising residues Ser6-Arg9 and the betaI or betaII-turn involving the Pro2-Thi5 fragment, whereas peptide 2 shows the tendency towards the formation of type I beta-turn at position 2,3. The structures of both antagonists are stabilized by a salt bridge between the guanidine moiety of Arg1 and the carboxyl group of Arg9. Moreover, the side chain of DArg0 is apart of the rest of molecule and is not involved in structural elements except for a few calculated structures.  相似文献   

12.
The purpose of this study is to elucidate the solution conformation of cyclic peptide 1 (cIBR), cyclo (1, 12)-Pen1-Pro2-Arg3-Gly4-Gly5-Ser6-Val7-Leu8-V al9-Thr10-Gly11-Cys12-OH, using NMR, circular dichroism (CD) and molecular dynamics (MD) simulation experiments. cIBR peptide (1), which is derived from the sequence of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1, CD54), inhibits homotypic T-cell adhesion in vitro. The peptide hinders T-cell adhesion by inhibiting the leukocyte function-associated antigen-1 (LFA-1, CD11a/CD18) interaction with ICAM-1. Furthermore, Molt-3 T cells bind and internalize this peptide via cell surface receptors such as LFA-1. Peptide internalization by the LFA-1 receptor is one possible mechanism of inhibition of T-cell adhesion. The recognition of the peptide by LFA-1 is due to its sequence and conformation; therefore, this study can provide a better understanding for the conformational requirement of peptide-receptor interactions. The solution structure of 1 was determined using NMR, CD and MD simulation in aqueous solution. NMR showed a major and a minor conformer due to the presence of cis/trans isomerization at the X-Pro peptide bond. Because the contribution of the minor conformer is very small, this work is focused only on the major conformer. In solution, the major conformer shows a trans-configuration at the Pen1-Pro2 peptide bond as determined by HMQC NMR. The major conformer shows possible beta-turns at Pro2-Arg3-Gly4-Gly5, Gly5-Ser6-Val7-Leu8, and Val9-Thr10-Gly11-Cys12. The first beta-turn is supported by the ROE connectivities between the NH of Gly4 and the NH of Gly5. The connectivities between the NH of Ser6 and the NH of Val7, followed by the interaction between the amide protons of Val7 and Leu8, support the presence of the second beta-turn. Furthermore, the presence of a beta-turn at Val9-Thr10-Gly11-Cys12 is supported by the NH-NH connectivities between Thr10 and Gly11 and between Gly11 and Cys12. The propensity to form a type I beta-turn structure is also supported by CD spectral analysis. The cIBR peptide (1) shows structural similarity at residues Pro2 to Val7 with the same sequence in the X-ray structure of D1-domain of ICAM-1. The conformation of Pro2 to Val7 in this peptide may be important for its binding selectivity to the LFA-1 receptor.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
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   

15.
X-ray analysis has been carried out on a crystal of the collagen model peptide (Hyp(R)-Hyp(R)-Gly)10 [where Hyp(R) is 4(R)-hydroxyproline] with 1.5 A resolution. The triple-helical structure of (Hyp(R)-Hyp(R)-Gly)10 has the same helical parameters and Rich and Crick II hydrogen bond patterns as those of other collagen model peptides. However, our full-length crystal structure revealed that almost all consecutive Hyp(R) residues take the up-up pucker in contrast to putative down-up puckering propensities of other collagen model peptides. The unique feature of thermodynamic parameters associated with the conformational transition of this peptide from triple helix to single coil is that both enthalpy and entropy changes of the transition are much smaller than those of other model peptides such as (Pro-Pro-Gly)10 and (Pro-Hyp(R)-Gly)10. To corroborate the precise structural information including main- and side-chain dihedral angles and intra- and interwater bridge networks, we estimated the degrees of hydration by comparing molecular volumes observed experimentally in solution to those calculated ones from the crystal structure. The results showed that the degree of hydration of (Hyp(R)-Hyp(R)-Gly)10 is comparable to that of (Pro-Hyp(R)-Gly)10 in the triple-helical state, but the former was more highly hydrated than (Pro-Hyp(R)-Gly)10 in the single-coil state. Because hydration reduces the enthalpy due to the formation of a hydrogen bond with a water molecule and diminishes the entropy due to the restriction of water molecules surrounding a peptide molecule, we concluded that the high thermal stability of (Hyp(R)-Hyp(R)-Gly)10 is able to be described by its high hydration in the single-coil state.  相似文献   

16.
Che Y  Marshall GR 《Biopolymers》2006,81(5):392-406
The beta-turn is a common motif in both proteins and peptides and often a recognition site in protein interactions. A beta-turn of four sequential residues reverses the direction of the peptide chain and is classified by the phi and psi backbone torsional angles of residues i + 1 and i + 2. The type VI turn usually contains a proline with a cis-amide bond at residue i + 2. Cis-proline analogs that constrain the peptide to adopt a type VI turn led to peptidomimetics with enhanced activity or metabolic stability. To compare the impact of different analogs on amide cis-trans isomerism and peptide conformation, the conformational preference for the cis-amide bond and the type VI turn was investigated at the MP2/6-31+G** level of theory in water (polarizable continuum water model). Analogs stabilize the cis-amide conformations through different mechanisms: (1) 5-alkylproline, with bulky hydrocarbon substituent on the C(delta) of proline, increases the cis-amide population through steric hindrance between the alkyl substituent and the N-terminal residues; (2) oxaproline or thioproline, the oxazolidine- or thiazolidine-derived proline analog, favors interactions between the dipole of the heterocyclic ring and the preceding carbonyl oxygen; and (3) azaproline, containing a nitrogen atom in place of the C(alpha) of proline, prefers the cis-amide bond by lone-pair repulsion between the alpha-nitrogen and the preceding carbonyl oxygen. Preference for the cis conformation was augmented by combining different modifications within a single proline. Azaproline and its derivatives are most effective in stabilizing cis-amide bonds without introducing additional steric bulk to compromise receptor interactions.  相似文献   

17.
Dasgupta B  Chakrabarti P  Basu G 《FEBS letters》2007,581(23):4529-4532
Identification of sequence motifs that favor cis peptide bonds in proteins is important for understanding and designing proteins containing turns mediated by cis peptide conformations. From (1)H NMR solution studies on short peptides, we show that the Pro-Pro peptide bond in Pro-Pro-Phe almost equally populates the cis and trans isomers, with the cis isomer stabilized by a CHc...pi interaction involving the terminal Pro and Phe. We also show that Phe is over-represented at sequence positions immediately following cis Pro-Pro motifs in known protein structures. Our results demonstrate that the Pro-Pro cis conformer in Pro-Pro-Phe sequence motifs is as important as the trans conformer, both in short peptides as well as in natively folded proteins.  相似文献   

18.
In an earlier study using Caco-2 cells, an in vitro cell culture model of the intestinal mucosa, we have shown that the acyloxyalkoxy-based cyclic prodrugs 3 and 4 of the opioid peptides [Leu5]-enkephalin(1, H-Tyr-GLY-Gly-Phe-Leu-OH) and DADLE(2, H-Tyr-D-Ala-Gly-Phe-D-Leu-OH), respectively, were substrates for apically polarized efflux systems and therefore less able to permeate the cell monolayers than were the opioid peptides themselves. In an attempt to explain how structure may influence the recognition of these cyclic prodrugs as substrates by the apically polarized efflux systems, we have determined the possible solution conformations of 3 and 4 using spectroscopic techniques (2D-NMR, CD) and molecular dynamics simulations. Spectroscopic as well as computational studies indicate that cyclic prodrug 4 exhibits a major and a minor conformer in a ratio of 3:2 where both conformers exhibit gamma and beta-turn structures. Spectroscopic, as well as molecular dynamics, studies indicate that the difference between the two conformers involves a cis/trans inversion occurring at the amide bond between the promoiety and Tyr1. The major conformer has a trans amide bond between the promoiety and Tyr1, whereas the minor conformer has a cis amide bond. The spectroscopic data indicate that cyclic prodrug 3 has a structure similar to that of the major conformer in cyclic prodrug 4. It has recently been reported that a particular arrangement of polar groups and spatial separation distances is required for substrate recognition by P-glycoprotein. When the conformation of the acyloxyalkoxy linker was investigated in the major and minor conformers of cyclic prodrug 4, with respect to distances between the polar functional groups, this ideal fixed spatial orientation was observed. Interestingly this same spatial orientation of polar functional groups was not observed for other cyclic prodrugs prepared by our laboratory using different chemical linkers (coumarinic acid and phenylpropionic acid) but the same opioid peptides that had previously been shown not to be substrates for the apically polarized efflux systems. Therefore, we hypothesize that the structure and/or the flexibility of the acyloxyalkoxy linker itself allows cyclic prodrugs 3 and 4 to adopt conformations that permit ideal arrangement of polar groups in the linker and their fixed spatial orientation. This possibly induces the substrate activity of cyclic prodrugs 3 and 4 for the apically polarized efflux systems.  相似文献   

19.
A systematic examination by 1H nuclear magnetic resonance of the population of beta-turn-containing conformers in several series of short linear peptides in water solution has demonstrated a dependence on amino acid sequence which has important implications for initiation of protein folding. The peptides consist of a number of variants of the sequence Tyr-Pro-Tyr-Asp, the trans isomer of which was previously shown to contain a reverse turn in water. Two-dimensional rotating-frame nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy provides unequivocal evidence that substantial populations of reverse turn conformations occur in water solutions of certain of these peptides. In the unfolded state, the peptides adopt predominantly extended chain (beta) conformations in water. It appears probable from the nuclear Overhauser effect connectivities observed that the reverse turns in the trans isomers are predominantly type II. The low temperature coefficient of the amide proton resonance of the residue at position 4 of the turn suggests the presence of an intramolecular hydrogen bond. The presence of the beta-turn conformation has been confirmed for certain peptides by circular dichroism measurements. Substitutions at positions 3 and 4 in the sequence Tyr-Pro-Tyr-Asp-Val can enhance or abolish the beta-turn population in the trans peptide isomers. The residue at position 3 of the turn is the primary determinant of its stability. A small amount of additional stabilization appears to result from an electrostatic interaction between the side-chain of residue 4 and the unblocked amino terminus. For peptides of the series Tyr-Pro-X-Asp-Val, where X represents all L-amino acid except Trp and Pro, the temperature coefficient of the Asp4 amide proton resonance provides a measure of the beta-turn population. The beta-turn populations in water solution measured in this way correlate with the beta-turn probabilities determined from protein crystal structures. This indicates that it is frequently the local amino acid sequence, rather than medium- to long-range interactions in the folded protein, that determines the beta-turn conformation in the folded state. Such sequences are excellent candidates for protein folding initiation sites. A high population of structured forms appears to be present in the cis isomer of certain of the peptides, as shown by a considerable increase in the proportion of the cis isomer and by measurement of nuclear Overhauser effects and 3JN alpha coupling constants.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
A conserved proline-rich motif (PRM) in the cytoplasmic domain of cytokine receptors has been suggested to be a signaling switch regulated by the action of the FK506 binding protein (FKBP) family of peptidylprolyl isomerases (O'Neal KD, Yu-Lee LY, Shearer WT, 1995, Ann NY Acad Sci 766:282-284). We have docked the prolactin receptor PRM (Ile1-Phe2-Pro3-Pro4-Val5-Pro6-Gly7-Pro8) to the ligand binding site of FKBP12. The procedure involved conformational search restricted by NMR restraints (O'Neal KD et al., 1996, Biochem J 315:833-844), energy minimization of the octapeptide conformers so obtained, template-based docking of a selected conformer to FKBP12, and energy refinement of the resulting complex. The template used was the crystal structure of a cyclic FK506-peptide hybrid bound to FKBP12. Val5-Pro6 of the PRM was taken to be the biologically relevant Xaa-Pro bond. The docked conformer is stabilized by two intramolecular hydrogen bonds, N7H7-->O4 and N2H2-->O8, and two intermolecular ones, Ile56; N-H-->O = C:Pro6 and Tyr82:O-H-->O = C:Gly7. This conformer features a Type I beta-turn and has extensive hydrophobic contacts with the FKBP12 binding surface. The observed interactions support the hypothesis that FKBP12 catalyzes cis-trans isomerization in the PRM when it is part of the longer cytoplasmic domain of a cytokine receptor, and suggest a significant role for the PRM in signal transduction.  相似文献   

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