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1.
alpha 1-Antitrypsin (alpha 1-AT) is the best-characterized member of the serpin superfamily of plasma proteins. Protease inhibitor members of this family undergo a characteristic reactive-center cleavage during expression of their inhibitory activity. The physical basis of this transition in alpha 1-AT from the stressed native conformation to the more stable reactive center cleaved (split) form was studied by Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy and neutron scattering. The FT-IR spectra show that, while split alpha 1-AT has three intense well-resolved components associated with the presence of antiparallel beta-sheet and alpha-helix conformations, the amide I band of native alpha 1-AT has only one intense component, associated with the presence of beta-sheet structure. 1H-2H exchange within the polypeptide backbone, studied by FT-IR and NMR spectroscopy, shows that the native form undergoes greater exchange than the split form. Under the same conditions, neutron scattering shows no differences in the radius of gyration RG of the native and the split forms. In contrast, in high concentrations of phosphate approaching those used for crystallization, the native form (unlike the split form) undergoes dimerization. These data indicate that the conformational transition largely involves localized secondary and tertiary structure rearrangements. We propose that the energetically stressed native alpha 1-AT structure is the consequence of a significantly reduced number of hydrogen bonds in secondary structure components and that reactive-site cleavage between Met358 and Ser359 is the key for the development of the fully hydrogen bonded more stable serpin structure.  相似文献   

2.
Alpha1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha1Pi) and ovalbumin are both members of the serpin superfamily. They share about a 30% sequence identity and exhibit great similarity in their three-dimensional structures. However, no apparent functional relationship has been found between the two proteins. Unlike alpha1Pi, ovalbumin shows no inhibitory effect to serine proteases. To see whether or not a conformational factor(s) may contribute to the functional difference, we carried out comparative analysis of the two proteins' secondary structure, thermal stability, and H-D exchange using FT-IR and CD spectroscopy. FT-IR analysis reveals significant differences in the amide I spectral patterns of the two proteins. Upon thermal denaturation, both proteins exhibit a strong low-wavenumber beta-sheet band at 1624 cm(-1) and a weak high-wavenumber beta-sheet band at 1694 cm(-1), indicative of intermolecular aggregate formation. However, the midpoint of the thermal-induced transition of alpha1Pi (approximately 55 degrees C) is 18 degrees C lower than that of ovalbumin (approximately 73 degrees C). The thermal stability analysis provides new insight into the structural changes associated with denaturation. The result of H-D exchange explains some puzzling spectral differences between the two proteins in D2O reported previously.  相似文献   

3.
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) was used to investigate the secondary structure of 5'-nucleotidase from bull seminal plasma (BSP). Spectra of protein in both D2O and H2O were analyzed by deconvolution and second derivative methods in order to observe the overlapping components of the amide I band. The protein, which is made up of two apparently identical subunits and which contains two zinc atoms, was studied in its native form, in the presence of dithiotreitol (DTT) and after removal of the two zinc atoms by means of nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA). Deconvolved and second derivative spectra of amide I band showed that the native protein contains mostly beta-sheet structure with a minor content of alpha-helix. The quantitative analysis of the amide I components was performed by a curve-fitting procedure which revealed 54% beta-sheet, 18% alpha-helix, 22% beta-turns and 6% unordered structure. The second derivative and deconvolved spectra of amide I band showed that no remarkable changes in the secondary structure of 5'-nucleotidase were induced by either DTT or NTA. These results were confirmed by the curve-fitting analysis where little or no changes occurred in the relative content of amide I components when the protein was treated with DTT or with NTA. Major changes, however, were observed in the thermal denaturation behavior of the protein. The native protein showed denaturation at temperatures between 70 and 75 degrees C, while the maximum of denaturation was observed between 65 and 70 degrees C and between 55 and 60 degrees C in the presence of NTA and DTT, respectively. The results obtained indicate that the two separate subunits of the protein have essentially the same secondary structure as that of the native enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
The thermal stability of three superoxide dismutases (SODs) with different metal ions (Mn, Cu/Zn, Fe) in the solid state was studied by a Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) microspectroscopy combined with thermal analyzer. The IR spectra showed a maximum peak at 1652 cm(-1) for all the native SODs in the amide I band, suggesting a predominant random coil with less alpha-helix structures. By heating each sample, a shoulder at 1631 cm(-1) in the amide I band gradually appeared from 45 degrees C for Fe SOD and from 50 degrees C for Mn SOD but another shoulder at 1639 cm(-1) appeared from 50 degrees C for Cu/Zn SOD. The peak at 1631 cm(-1) is due to the intermolecular beta-sheet structure, but the peak at 1639 cm(-1) corresponds to the major intramolecular beta-sheet with less random coil structure. This reveals that in the first heating process the transformation from random coil/alpha-helix structure to beta-sheet structure initiated from around 45-50 degrees C. There was about 16-22% compositional change resulting from that transformation. However, both additional shoulders stood there and did not restore to their original spectra even with cooling to room temperature, suggesting the denaturation and irreversible properties of the solid SODs after heating. The thermal-dependent denaturation and irreversibility of Mn SOD, Cu/Zn SOD and Fe SOD were clearly evidenced by the increase in intramolecular and intermolecular beta-sheet structure.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of pressure on the conformational structure of amyloid beta (1-40) peptide (A beta(1-40)), exacerbated with or without temperature, was determined by Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) microspectroscopy. The result indicates the shift of the maximum peak of amide I band of intact solid A beta(1-40) from 1655 cm(-1) (alpha-helix) to 1647-1643 cm(-1) (random coil) with the increase of the mechanical pressure. A new peak at 1634 cm(-1) assigned to beta-antiparallel sheet structure was also evident. Furthermore, the peak at 1540 cm(- 1) also shifted to 1527 (1529) cm(-1) in amide II band. The former was assigned to the combination of alpha-helix and random coil structures, and the latter was due to beta-sheet structure. Changes in the composition of each component in the deconvoluted and curve-fitted amide I band of the compressed A beta(1-40) samples were obtained from 33% to 22% for alpha-helix/random coil structures and from 47% to 57% for beta-sheet structure with the increase of pressure, respectively. This demonstrates that pressure might induce the conformational transition from alpha-helix to random coil and to beta- sheet structure. The structural transformation of the compressed A beta(1-40) samples was synergistically influenced by the combined effects of pressure and temperature. The thermal-induced formation of beta-sheet structure was significantly dependent on the pressures applied. The smaller the pressure applied the faster the beta-sheet structure transformed. The thermal-dependent transition temperatures of solid A beta(1-40) prepared by different pressures were near 55-60 degrees C.  相似文献   

6.
Most serpins are inhibitors of serine proteinases and are thought to undergo a conformational change upon complex formation with proteinase that involves partial insertion of the reactive center loop into a beta-sheet of the inhibitor. Ovalbumin, although a serpin, is not an inhibitor of serine proteinases. It has been proposed that this deficiency arises from the presence of a charged residue, arginine, at a critical point (P14) in the reactive center region, which prevents loop insertion into the beta-sheet and thereby precludes inhibitory properties. To test whether loop insertion is prevented in ovalbumin we have examined the properties of two forms of ovalbumin: the native protein and S-ovalbumin, a form that forms spontaneously from native ovalbumin and has increased stability. Calorimetric measurements showed that S-ovalbumin was more stable than ovalbumin by about 3 kcal mol-1. CD spectra, which indicated that S-ovalbumin had less alpha-helix than native ovalbumin, and 1H NMR spectra, which indicated very similar overall structures, suggest limited conformational differences between the two forms. From comparison of the susceptibility of the reactive center region of each protein to proteolysis by porcine pancreatic elastase and by subtilisin Carlsberg, we concluded that the limited native-to-S conformational change specifically affected the reactive center region. These data are consistent with a structure for S-ovalbumin in which part of the reactive center loop has inserted into beta-sheet A to give a more stable structure, analogously to other serpins. However, the rate of loop insertion appears to be very much lower than for inhibitory serpins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase structure and organization in the membrane has been studied by infrared spectroscopy by decomposition of the amide I band. Besides the component bands assignable to secondary structure elements such as alpha-helix, beta-sheet, etc...., two unusual bands, one at 1,645 cm(-1) in H2O buffer and the other at 1,625 cm(-1) in D2O buffer are present. By perturbing the protein using temperature and limited proteolysis, the band at 1,645 cm(-1) is tentatively assigned to alpha-helical segments located in the cytoplasmic domain and coupled to beta-sheet structure, whereas the band at 1,625 cm(-1) arises probably from monomer-monomer contacts in the native oligomeric protein. The secondary structure obtained is 33% alpha-helical segments in the transmembrane plus stalk domain; 20% alpha-helix and 22% beta-sheet in the cytoplasmic domain plus 19% turns and 6% unordered structure. Thermal unfolding of Ca2+-ATPase is a complex process that cannot be described as a two-state denaturation. The results obtained are compatible with the idea that the protein is an oligomer at room temperature. The loss of the 1,625 cm(-1) band upon heating would be consistent with a disruption of the oligomers in a process that later gives rise to aggregates (appearance of the 1,618 cm(-1) band). This picture would also be compatible with early results suggesting that processes governing Ca2+ accumulation and ATPase activity are uncoupled at temperatures above 37 degrees C, so that while ATPase activity proceeds at high rates, Ca2+ accumulation is inhibited.  相似文献   

8.
S Yajima  Y Muto  S Yokoyama  H Masaki  T Uozumi 《Biochemistry》1992,31(24):5578-5586
By performing 1H-1H and 1H-15N two-dimensional (2D) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments, the complete sequence-specific resonance assignment was determined for the colicin E3 immunity protein (84 residues; ImmE3), which binds to colicin E3 and inhibits its RNase activity. First, the fingerprint region of the spectrum was analyzed by homonuclear 1H-1H HOHAHA and NOESY methods. For the identification of overlapping resonances, heteronuclear 1H-15N (HMQC-HOHAHA, HMQC-NOESY) experiments were performed, so that the complete 1H and 15N resonance assignments were provided. Then the secondary structure of ImmE3 was determined by examination of characteristic patterns of sequential backbone proton NOEs in combination with measurement of exchange rates of amide protons and 3JHN alpha coupling constants. From these results, it was concluded that ImmE3 contains a four-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet (residues 2-10, 19-22, 47-49, and 71-79) and a short alpha-helix (residues 31-36).  相似文献   

9.
Peptide-chain secondary structure of bacteriorhodopsin.   总被引:7,自引:3,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Ultraviolet circular dichroism spectroscopy in the interval from 190 to 240 nm and infrared spectroscopy in the region of the amide I band (1,600 cm-1 to 1,700 cm-1) has been used to estimate the alpha-helix content and the beta-sheet content of bacteriorhodopsin. Circular dichroism spectroscopy strongly suggests that the alpha-helix content is sufficient for only five helices, if each helix is composed of 20 or more residues. It also suggests that there is substantial beta-sheet conformation in bacteriorhodopsin. The presence of beta-sheet secondary structure is further suggested by the presence of a 1,639 cm-1 shoulder on the amide I band in the infrared spectrum. Although a structural model consisting of seven alpha-helical rods has been generally accepted up to this point, the spectroscopic data are more consistent with a model consisting of five alpha-helices and four strands of beta-sheet. We note that the primary amino acid sequence can be assigned to segments of alpha-helix and beta-sheet in a way that does not require burying more than two charged groups in the hydrophobic membrane interior, contrary to the situation for any seven-helix model.  相似文献   

10.
The circular dichroism (CD) of cytochrome oxidase in solution indicates the presence of both alpha-helix (approximately 37%) and B-sheet (approximately 18%). In oriented films generated by the isopotential spin-dry method, the CD measured normal to the film shows a marked decrease in the negative bands at 222 and 208 nm, and a decrease and red shift in the positive band near 195 nm, relative to solution spectra. These features are characteristic of alpha-helices oriented with their helix axes along the direction of light propagation. A quantitative estimate of the orientation, based on the ratio of the rotational strengths of the 208-nm band in the film and in solution, leads to an average angle between the helix axis and the normal to the film, phi alpha of approximately 39 degrees. A method for analyzing infrared (IR) linear dichroism is developed that can be applied to proteins with comparable amounts of alpha-helix and beta-sheet. From analysis of the amide I band, phi alpha is found to lie between 20 and 36 degrees, depending on the angle that the amide I transition moment forms with the helix axis. A survey of the literature on the amide I transition moment direction indicates that a value of approximately 27 degrees is appropriate for standard alpha-helical systems, such as those in cytochrome oxidase. A larger value, near 40 degrees, is reasonable for systems that have distorted alpha-helices, as evidenced by amide I frequencies above 1,660 cm-1, as is the case of bacteriorhodopsin. This conclusion supports phi alpha approximately 36 degrees from IR linear dichroism, in agreement with the CD results. Linear dichroism in the amide I and amide II region indicates that the beta-sheet in cytochrome oxidase is oriented with the carbonyl groups nearly parallel to the plane of the membrane and the chain direction inclined at approximately 40 degrees to the normal. Comparison of these results with tentative identification of transmembrane helices from sequence data suggests that either some of the transmembrane helices are inclined at an unexpectedly large angle to the normal, or the number of such helices has been overestimated. Some putative transmembrane helices may be beta-strands spanning the membrane.  相似文献   

11.
The thermostable tailspike endorhamnosidase of bacteriophage P22 has been investigated by laser Raman spectroscopy to determine the protein's secondary structure and the basis of its thermostability. The conformation of the native tailspike, determined by Raman amide I and amide III band analyses, is 52 to 61% beta-sheet, 24 to 27% alpha-helix, 15 to 21% beta-turn and 0 to 10% other structure types. The secondary structure of the wild-type tailspike, as monitored by the conformation-sensitive Raman amide bands, was stable to 80 degrees C, denatured reversibly between 80 and 90 degrees C, and irreversibly above 90 degrees C. The purified native form of a temperature-sensitive folding mutant (tsU38) contains secondary structures virtually identical to those in the wild-type in aqueous solution at physiological conditions (0.05 M-Na+ (pH 7.5], at both permissive (20 degrees C) and restrictive (40 degrees C) temperatures. This supports previous results showing that the mutational defect at 40 degrees C affects intermediates in the folding pathway rather than the native structure. At temperatures above 60 degrees C the wild-type and mutant forms were distinguishable: the reversible and irreversible denaturation thresholds were approximately 15 to 20 degrees C lower in the mutant than in the wild-type protein. The irreversible denaturation of the mutant tailspikes led to different aggregation/polymerization products from the wild-type, indicating that the mutation altered the unfolding pathway. In both cases only a small percentage of the native secondary structure was altered by irreversible thermal denaturation, indicating that the aggregated states retain considerable native structure.  相似文献   

12.
Elongation factor 1alpha from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus (SsEF-1alpha) carries the aminoacyl tRNA to the ribosome; it binds GDP or GTP, and it is also endowed with an intrinsic GTPase activity that is triggered in vitro by NaCl at molar concentrations [Masullo, M., De Vendittis, E., and Bocchini, V. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 20376-20379]. The structural properties of SsEF-1alpha were investigated by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The estimation of the secondary structure of the SsEF-1alpha*GDP complex, made by curve fitting of the amide I' band or by factor analysis of the amide I band, indicated a content of 34-36% alpha-helix, 35-40% beta-sheet, 14-19% turn, and 7% unordered structure. The substitution of the GDP bound with the slowly hydrolyzable GTP analogue Gpp(NH)p induced a slight increase in the alpha-helix and beta-sheet content. On the other hand, the alpha-helix content of the SsEF-1alpha*GDP complex increased upon addition of salts, and the highest effect was produced by 5 M NaCl. The thermal stability of the SsEF-1alpha*GDP complex was significantly reduced when the GDP was replaced with Gpp(NH)p or in the presence of NaBr or NH4Cl, whereas a lower destabilizing effect was provoked by NaCl and KCl. Therefore, the extent of the destabilizing effect of salts depended on the nature of both the cation and the anion. The data suggested that the sodium ion was responsible for the induction of the GTPase activity, whereas the anion modulated the enzymatic activity through destabilization of particular regions of SsEF-1alpha. Finally, the infrared data suggested that, in particular region(s) of the polypeptide chain, the SsEF-1alpha*Gpp(NH)p complex possesses structural conformations which are different from those present in the SsEF-1alpha*GDP complex.  相似文献   

13.
The immunoperoxidase method was used to investigate the presence of intracytoplasmic lysozyme, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin (alpha 1-ACT), alpha 1-antitrypsin (alpha 1-AT), transferrin, and albumin in hyperplastic and inflamed human lymph nodes. Lysozyme was demonstrated in eosinophils, neutrophils, histiocytes, in epithelioid cells, mast cells, and some lining cells of lymph node sinuses. alpha 1-ACT was detectable in many, but not all histiocytes that stained for lysozyme, and in sinus histiocytes, epithelioid cells, and mast cells, but not in neutrophils or eosinophils. alpha 1-AT was demonstrable in mast cells, neutrophils, and some epithelioid cells, but not in histiocytes. Transferrin was found in mast cells, but not in any of the other cell types investigated. Albumin was detectable in a few epithelioid cells and giant cells of the Langhans type. Lysozyme, alpha 1-ACT, alpha 1-AT, transferrin, and albumin were never demonstrable in interdigitating reticulum cells, dendritic reticulum cells, or lymphoid cells.  相似文献   

14.
The secondary structure of streptokinase (Sk) in aqueous solution was quantitatively examined by using Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy. Resolution enhancement techniques, including Fourier deconvolution and derivative spectroscopy, were combined with band curve-fitting procedures to quantitate the spectral information from the amide I bands. Nine component bands were found under the broad, nearly featureless amide I bands which reflect the presence of various substructures. The relative areas of these component bands indicate an amount of beta-sheet between 30 and 37% and an alpha-helix content of only 12-13% in Sk. Further conformational substructures are assigned to turns (25-26%) and to "random" structures (15-16%). Additionally, the correlation of a pronounced component band near 1640 cm-1 (10-16% fractional area) with the possible presence of 3(10)-helices is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The solution structure of the phosphocarrier protein, HPr, from Bacillus subtilis has been determined by analysis of two-dimensional (2D) NMR spectra acquired for the unphosphorylated form of the protein. Inverse-detected 2D (1H-15N) heteronuclear multiple quantum correlation nuclear Overhauser effect (HMQC NOESY) and homonuclear Hartmann-Hahn (HOHAHA) spectra utilizing 15N assignments (reported here) as well as previously published 1H assignments were used to identify cross-peaks that are not resolved in 2D homonuclear 1H spectra. Distance constraints derived from NOESY cross-peaks, hydrogen-bonding patterns derived from 1H-2H exchange experiments, and dihedral angle constraints derived from analysis of coupling constants were used for structure calculations using the variable target function algorithm, DIANA. The calculated models were refined by dynamical simulated annealing using the program X-PLOR. The resulting family of structures has a mean backbone rmsd of 0.63 A (N, C alpha, C', O atoms), excluding the segments containing residues 45-59 and 84-88. The structure is comprised of a four-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet with two antiparallel alpha-helices on one side of the sheet. The active-site His 15 residue serves as the N-cap of alpha-helix A, with its N delta 1 atom pointed toward the solvent to accept the phosphoryl group during the phosphotransfer reaction with enzyme I. The existence of a hydrogen bond between the side-chain oxygen atom of Tyr 37 and the amide proton of Ala 56 is suggested, which may account for the observed stabilization of the region that includes the beta-turn comprised of residues 37-40. If the beta alpha beta beta alpha beta (alpha) folding topology of HPr is considered with the peptide chain polarity reversed, the protein fold is identical to that described for another group of beta alpha beta beta alpha beta proteins that include acylphosphatase and the RNA-binding domains of the U1 snRNP A and hnRNP C proteins.  相似文献   

16.
R A Copeland  T G Spiro 《Biochemistry》1987,26(8):2134-2139
Raman intensities obtained with UV laser excitation at 223, 218, 204, 200, and 192 nm are reported for the amide I, II, III, and II' bands of random-coil polylysine. The excitation profiles show enhancement via the pi-pi electronic transition, at approximately 190 nm. Enhancement for amide I is weak, however, and most of the intensity can be accounted for by preresonance with a deeper UV transition at approximately 165 nm. The amide II' band dominates the spectrum in D2O, consistent with the suggestion that the main distortion coordinate in the pi-pi excited state is the stretching of the C-N peptide bond. Amide II intensities with 200- and 192-nm excitation are reported for several proteins. The previously reported negative linear correlation with alpha-helix content (due to Raman hypochromism in the alpha-helices) is found not to apply to proteins with high beta-sheet content when the excitation wavelength is 200 nm. Much higher intensities are seen for these proteins and are attributed to a red shift of the pi-pi absorption for the beta-structure. A linear correlation with alpha-helix content is found for excitation of 192 nm, which corresponds to an isosbestic point of the beta-sheet and random-coil absorption bands. Characteristic amide II Raman cross sections are derived for alpha-helical, beta-sheet, and random-coil elements and are used to determine secondary structure for alpha 1- and beta-purothionin, by use of amide II intensities with 200- and 192-nm excitation. The results are in good agreement with a previous determination based on amide I band deconvolution in off-resonance Raman spectra.  相似文献   

17.
Samples of staphylococcal nuclease H124L (cloned protein overproduced in Escherichia coli whose sequence is identical with that of the nuclease isolated from the V8 strain of Staphylococcus aureus) were labeled uniformly with carbon-13 (26% ul 13C), uniformly with nitrogen-15 (95% ul 15N), and specifically by incorporating nitrogen-15-labeled leucine ([98% 15N]Leu) or carbon-13-labeled lysine ([26% ul 13C]Lys), arginine ([26% ul 13C]Arg), or methionine ([26% ul 13C]Met). Solutions of the ternary complexes of these analogues (nuclease H124L-pdTp-Ca2+) at pH 5.1 (H2O) or pH* 5.5 (2H2O) at 45 degrees C were analyzed as appropriate to the labeling pattern by multinuclear two-dimensional (2D) NMR experiments at spectrometer fields of 14.09 and 11.74 T: 1H-13C single-bond correlation (1H[13C]SBC); 1H-13C single-bond correlation with NOE relay (1H[13C]SBC-NOE); 1H-13C single-bond correlation with Hartmann-Hahn relay (1H-[13C]SBC-HH); 1H-13C multiple-bond correlation (1H[13C]MBC); 1H-15N single-bond correlation (1H-[15N]SBC); 1H-15N single-bond correlation with NOE relay (1H[15N]SBC-NOE). The results have assisted in spin system assignments and in identification of secondary structural elements. Nuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOE's) characteristic of antiparallel beta-sheet (d alpha alpha NOE's) were observed in the 1H [13C]-SBC-NOE spectrum of the nuclease ternary complex labeled uniformly with 13C. NOE's characteristic of alpha-helix (dNN NOE's) were observed in the 1H[15N]SBC-NOE spectrum of the complex prepared from protein labeled uniformly with 15N. The assignments obtained from these multinuclear NMR studies have confirmed and extended assignments based on 1H[1H] 2D NMR experiments [Wang, J., LeMaster, D. M., & Markley, J. L. (1990) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)].  相似文献   

18.
J Orban  P Alexander  P Bryan 《Biochemistry》1992,31(14):3604-3611
Two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy has been used to obtain sequence-specific 1H NMR assignments for the IgG-binding B2-domain of streptococcal protein G. Secondary structure elements were identified from analysis of characteristic backbone-backbone NOE patterns and amide proton exchange data. The B2-domain contains a four-stranded beta-sheet region in which the two inner strands form a parallel beta-sheet with each other and antiparallel beta-sheets with the outer strands. The outer strands are connected via a 16-residue alpha-helix and short loops on both ends of the helix. The alpha-helix and beta-sheet structures contain well-defined polar and apolar sides, and numerous long-range NOEs from the apolar helix to apolar sheet regions were used to derive a model for the global fold of the B2-domain. While the overall fold is similar to that obtained for B1-type domains, differences in amide proton exchange rates and hydrophobic packing are observed.  相似文献   

19.
Secondary structure of three amyloid b-peptides [A beta(1-28), A beta(1-40) and A beta(1-42)] in the solid state was respectively determined by Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) microspectroscopy. Their thermal-dependent structural transformation were also investigated by FT-IR microspectroscopy equipped with a thermal analyzer. The present result demonstrates that the solid-state A beta(1-28), A beta(1-40) and A beta(1-42) peptides showed a significant IR spectral difference in the amide I and II bands. The secondary conformation of A beta(1-28) peptide was the combination of major beta-sheet and minor alpha-helix with little random coil structures, but A beta(1-40) peptide showed the co-existence of major beta-sheet and minor random coil with little alpha-helix structures. A beta(1-42) peptide mainly consisted of the predominant b-sheet structure. Although the intact A beta(1-28), A beta(1-40) or A beta(1-42) peptide exhibits a different secondary structure, a similar beta-conformation may form after thermal treatment. A thermal-dependent transition was found for solid A beta(1-28) and A beta(1-40) peptides near 40 degrees C and 45 degrees C, respectively. There was no transition temperature for solid A beta(1-42) peptide, however, due to only a very little level of alpha-helix and random coil structure containing in the solid A beta(1-42) peptide. The thermal denaturation plays an important role in the structural transformation from alpha-helix/random coil to beta-sheet.  相似文献   

20.
The Fmoc solid phase synthesis of A beta(1-40), a strongly aggregating peptide found in Alzheimer's disease brain, was performed using 2-hydroxy-4-methoxybenzyl (Hmb) backbone amide protection. Hmb-Gly residues were incorporated using N(alpha)-Fmoc-Hmb-Gly-OH rather than N,O-bisFmoc-Hmb-Gly-OPfp. Amino acid acylation of the sterically hindered Hmb-amino acids was monitored using 'semi-on-line' MALDI-TOF-MS in a novel application of this technique which significantly simplified the successful incorporation of these residues. Standard coupling conditions in N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) were used throughout the synthesis. Comparative structural studies of acetyl-Hmb-protected and native A beta(1-40) were performed to investigate the structural basis of Hmb-mediated disaggregation. The incorporation of backbone amide protection was observed by circular dichroism spectroscopy and gel electrophoresis to strongly affect the solution structure of A beta(1-40). Despite the reported structure-breaking activity of Hmb groups, penta(acetyl-Hmb)A beta(1-40) was found to adopt both alpha-helix and intermolecular beta-sheet conformations. In 100% TFE a mixed alpha-helix/random coil structure was formed by the protected peptide indicating reduced alpha-helical propensity relative to A beta(1-40). The protected peptide formed beta-sheet structures in aqueous buffer. Gel electrophoresis indicated that, unlike native A beta(1-40), penta(acetyl-Hmb)A beta(1-40) did not form large aggregate species.  相似文献   

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