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1.
The N-terminal portion of HIV-1 Tat covering residues 1-9 is a competitive inhibitor of dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DP IV). We have used 1H NMR techniques, coupled with molecular dynamics methods, to determine the conformation of this peptide in the three diverse media: DMSO-d6, water (pH 2.7) and 40% HFA solution. The results indicate that in both DMSO-d6 and HFA the peptide has a tendency to acquire a type I beta-turn around the segment Asp5-Pro6-Asn7-IIe8. The N-terminal end is seen to be as a random coil. In water, the structure is best described as a left-handed polyproline type II (PPII) helix for the mid segment region Asp2 to Pro6. The structures obtained in this study have been compared with an earlier report on Tat (1-9).  相似文献   

2.
The envelope proteins, gp 120 and gp41 of HIV-1, play a crucial role in receptor (CD4+ lymphocytes) binding and membrane fusion. The fragment 254-274 of gp120 is conserved in all strains of HIV and, as a part of the full gp120 protein, behaves as 'immunosilent', but as an individual fragment it is 'immunoreactive'. When this fragment binds to its receptor, it activates the fusion domain of gp41 allowing viral entry into the host CD4+ cells. The conformation of fragment 254-274 of the gp120 domain and fragment 519-541 of the gp41 domain was studied by NMR and MD simulations. The studies were carried out in three varied media--water, DMSO-d6 and hexafluoroacetone (HFA). The fusogenic nature of the gp41 domain peptide was investigated by 31P NMR experiments with model bilayers prepared from dimyristoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC). The solvent was seen to exert a major effect on the structure of the two peptides. Fragment (254-274) of gp120 in DMSO-d6 had a type I beta-turn around the tetrad Val9-Ser10-Thr11-Gln12 while in HFA a helical structure spanning the region Ile5 to Gln12 was seen with the remaining part of the peptide in a random coil structure. It is possible that the beta-turn may constitute an initiation site for the formation of the helix. In water at pH 4.5, the peptide adopted a beta-sheet. The NMR results for fragment 519-541 of gp41 are conclusive of a beta-sheet structure in DMSO-d6, a conformation which may help in insertion into the membrane, a notion also put forward by others. The 31P NMR studies of DMPC vesicles with this fragment show its fusogenic nature, promoting fusion of unilamellar vesicles to larger agglomerates like multilamellar ones.  相似文献   

3.
Gerig JT 《Biopolymers》2004,74(3):240-247
Intermolecular (1)H[(19)F] and (1)H[(1)H] nuclear Overhauser effects have been used to explore interaction of solvent components with melittin dissolved in 50% hexafluoroacetone trihydrate (HFA)/water. Standard nuclear Overhauser effect experiments and an analysis of C(alpha)H proton chemical shifts confirm that the conformation of the peptide in this solvent is alpha-helical from residues Ala4 to Thr11 and from Leu13 to Arg24. The two helical regions are not collinear; the interhelix angle (144 +/- 20 degrees ) found in this work is near that observed in the solid state and previous NMR studies. Intermolecular NOEs arising from interactions between spins of the solvent and the solute indicate that both fluoroalcohol and water molecules are strongly enough bound to the peptide that solvent-solute complexes persist for > or =2 ns. Preferential interactions of HFA with many hydrophobic side chains of the peptide are apparent while water molecules appear to be localized near hydrophilic side chains. These results indicate that interactions of both HFA and water are qualitatively different from those present when the peptide is dissolved in 35% hexafluoro-2-propanol/water, a chemically similar helix-supporting solvent system.  相似文献   

4.
The polyphemusins present in the hemocytes of the horsechoe crab and their structurally modified analogs have been shown to exhibit activity against HIV-1. Among the many variants, T22 ([Tyr(5,12), Lys(7)]-polyphemusin II), and its shorter and more potent analog, T140 [Arg(1)-Arg-2-Nal-Cys-Tyr(5)-Arg-Lys-D-Lys-Pro-Tyr(10)-Arg-Cit-Cys-Arg(14)] (Polyphemusin II-derived peptide), affect the HIV-cell fusion process and inhibit the T-cell line-tropic (T-tropic) HIV-1 infection. Conformational studies of polyphemusin II derived peptide have been carried out by (1)H and (13)C 2D-NMR and MD simulations in water and HFA (40%). The NMR parameters of chemical shift, temperature coefficients of the NH chemical shifts, (3)JNHalpha coupling constants and the pattern of nOe's were used to deduce the structural characteristics. Solution structures were generated using dihedral and distance restraints by MD simulations. The structures are characterized by a dominant family possessing an anti-parallel beta-pleated sheet that is constrained by the disulphide bridge between Cys4 and Cys13. The two strands of the beta-sheet are joined by a Type II' beta-turn spanning the residues Lys(7)-D-Lys(8)-Pro(9)-Tyr(10). This conformation is present in both water and HFA. The only difference in the two structures is that the beta-strands are more cohesive in HFA being firmly held by H-bonds. The solution structures generated from MD simulations were refined by MARDIGRAS to R-factors of 0.44 and 0.57 in water and HFA respectively. The conformation deduced for T140 is very similar to that reported for T22 and is thought to be associated with their anti HIV activity.  相似文献   

5.
J R Brisson  J P Carver 《Biochemistry》1983,22(15):3671-3680
The solution conformation is presented for representatives of each of the major classes of asparaginyl oligosaccharides. In this report the conformation of alpha(1-3)-, alpha(1-2)-, beta(1-2)-, and beta(1-4)-linked units is described. The conformational properties of these glycopeptides were determined by high-resolution 1H nuclear magnetic resonance in conjunction with potential energy calculations. The NMR parameters that were used in this analysis were chemical shifts and nuclear Overhauser enhancements. Potential energy calculations were used to evaluate the preferred conformers available for the different linkages in glycopeptides and to draw conclusions about the behavior in solution of these molecules. It was found that the linkage conformation of the Man alpha 1-3 residues was not affected by substitution either at the 2-position by alpha Man or beta GlcNAc or at the 4-position by beta GlcNAc or by the presence of a bisecting GlcNAc on the adjacent beta Man residue.  相似文献   

6.
We show for the first time that the secondary structure of the Alzheimer beta-peptide is in a temperature-dependent equilibrium between an extended left-handed 3(1) helix and a flexible random coil conformation. Circular dichroism spectra, recorded at 0.03 mM peptide concentration, show that the equilibrium is shifted towards increasing left-handed 3(1) helix structure towards lower temperatures. High resolution nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy has been used to study the Alzheimer peptide fragment Abeta(12-28) in aqueous solution at 0 degrees C and higher temperatures. NMR translation diffusion measurements show that the observed peptide is in monomeric form. The chemical shift dispersion of the amide protons increases towards lower temperatures, in agreement with the increased population of a well-ordered secondary structure. The solvent exchange rates of the amide protons at 0 degrees C and pH 4.5 vary within at least two orders of magnitude. The lowest exchange rates (0.03-0.04 min(-1)) imply that the corresponding amide protons may be involved in hydrogen bonding with neighboring side chains.  相似文献   

7.
The amyloid beta peptide (Abeta) with 39-42 residues is the major component of amyloid plaques found in brains of Alzheimer's disease patients, and soluble oligomeric peptide aggregates mediate toxic effects on neurons. The Abeta aggregation involves a conformational change of the peptide structure to beta-sheet. In the present study, we report on the effect of detergents on the structure transitions of Abeta, to mimic the effects that biomembranes may have. In vitro, monomeric Abeta(1-40) in a dilute aqueous solution is weakly structured. By gradually adding small amounts of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) or lithium dodecyl sulfate to a dilute aqueous solution, Abeta(1-40) is converted to beta-sheet, as observed by CD at 3 degrees C and 20 degrees C. The transition is mainly a two-state process, as revealed by approximately isodichroic points in the titrations. Abeta(1-40) loses almost all NMR signals at dodecyl sulfate concentrations giving rise to the optimal beta-sheet content (approximate detergent/peptide ratio = 20). Under these conditions, thioflavin T fluorescence measurements indicate a maximum of aggregated amyloid-like structures. The loss of NMR signals suggests that these are also involved in intermediate chemical exchange. Transverse relaxation optimized spectroscopy NMR spectra indicate that the C-terminal residues are more dynamic than the others. By further addition of SDS or lithium dodecyl sulfate reaching concentrations close to the critical micellar concentration, CD, NMR and FTIR spectra show that the peptide rearranges to form a micelle-bound structure with alpha-helical segments, similar to the secondary structures formed when a high concentration of detergent is added directly to the peptide solution.  相似文献   

8.
The interactions of Alzheimer's amyloid beta-peptide with cyclodextrins were studied by (1)H NMR: the translational diffusion coefficient of the peptide and chemical shift changes were studied by the presence of variable concentrations of cyclodextrins. For the full-length peptide, Abeta(1-40), the combined results of translational diffusion and chemical shift changes are consistent with a model where aromatic side chains interact with beta-cyclodextrin with dissociation constants in the millimolar range. The diffusion data were consistent with two beta-cyclodextrin molecules bound per peptide. The binding occurs at two sites, at F(19) and/or F(20) and at Y(10), with dissociation constants K(d)(F) = 4.7 mM and K(d)(Y) = 6.6 mM, respectively, in 10 mM sodium phosphate, pH 7.4 and 298 K. Shorter Alzheimer peptide fragments were studied to measure specific affinities for different binding sites. The N-terminal fragment Abeta(1-9) with a putative binding site at F(4) does not show measurable affinity for beta-cyclodextrin. The fragment Abeta(12-28) has similar apparent affinity (K(d) = 3.8 mM) to beta-cyclodextrin as the full-length peptide Abeta(1-40). Here, the diffusion data suggests a one-to-one stoichiometry, and the binding site is F(19) and/or F(20). Both diffusion results and chemical shift changes give the same affinity. A variant Abeta(12-28)G(19)G(20) without phenylalanines does not bind to beta-cyclodextrin. Other potential ligands, alpha-cyclodextrin, gamma-cyclodextrin, nicotine, and nornicotine do not bind to the Abeta(12-28) fragment. This study shows that combined (1)H NMR diffusion and chemical shift changes may be used to quantitatively determine affinities and stoichiometries of weak interactions, using unlabeled ligands and hosts of comparable sizes.  相似文献   

9.
In order to elucidate the structure-antibiotic activity relationships of the peptides, the three-dimensional structures of two hybrid peptides, CA(1-8) - MA(1-12) and CA(1-8) - ME(1-12) in trifluoroethanol-containing aqueous solution were investigated by NMR spectroscopy. Both CA(1-8) - MA(1-12) and CA(1-8) - ME(1-12) have strong antibacterial activity but only CA(1-8) - ME(1-12) has hemolytic activity against human erythrocytes. CA(1-8) - MA(1-12) has a hydrophobic 310-helix of only two turns combined with one short helix in the N-terminus with a flexible hinge section in between. CA(1-8) - MA(1-12) has a severely bent structure in the middle of the peptide. These structural features as well as the low hydrophobicity of CA(1-8) - MA(1-12) seem to be crucial for the selective lysis against the membrane of prokaryotic cells. CA(1-8) - ME(1-12) has an alpha-helical structure of about three turns in the melittin domain and a flexible structure with one turn in the cecropin domain connected with a flexible hinge section in between, and these might be the structural features required for membrane disruption against prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. The central hinge region (Gly9-Ile10-Gly11) in an amphipathic antibacterial peptide is considered to play an important role in providing the conformational flexibility required for ion channel formation of the C-terminal hydrophobic alpha-helix on cell membrane.  相似文献   

10.
Kaas Q  Aumelas A  Kubo S  Chino N  Kobayashi Y  Chiche L 《Biochemistry》2002,41(37):11099-11108
The [des(17-21)]-endothelin-1 (CSH-ET) and [Lys(-)(2)-Arg(-)(1)-des(17-21)]-endothelin-1 (KR-CSH-ET) peptides, designed by removing the five-residue hydrophobic tail from the endothelin-1 (ET-1) and [Lys(-)(2)-Arg(-)(1)]-endothelin-1 (KR-ET-1) peptides, respectively, were synthesized. Previous studies on KR-ET-1 showed that, in contrast to ET-1, this engineered compound displays a pH-dependent conformational change related to the formation of a stabilizing salt bridge between the Arg(-)(1) and Asp(8) side chains. CD and NMR spectra indicate that CSH-ET and KR-CSH-ET display conformational behavior similar to those of ET-1 and KR-ET-1, respectively. The short salt bridge-stabilized KR-CSH-ET peptide therefore appears to be an attractive elementary scaffold for drug design. The solution structure of the salt-bridged form of KR-CSH-ET was determined by NMR at pH 4.5 and is very similar to the corresponding form of the parent KR-ET-1 peptide. Molecular dynamics simulations of the salt-bridged form of KR-CSH-ET were performed using both the GB/SA implicit solvation scheme or an explicit solvation and the particle-mesh Ewald method for long-range electrostatic calculation. Unexpectedly, the Arg(-)(1)-Asp(8) salt bridge does not display in the simulation the stability that could be expected from the experimental data. The cooperative involvement of a cation-pi interaction in formation of the salt bridge has been hypothesized. Difficulties in accurately simulating cation-pi interactions might be responsible for the lack of stability in the simulation. At this time, however, no definitive explanation for the observed discrepancy between experiments and simulations is available, and further experimental studies appear to be necessary to fully understand in atomic detail the pH-dependent conformational change observed in the KR-ET-1 series.  相似文献   

11.
Lim KH  Kim YK  Chang YT 《Biochemistry》2007,46(47):13523-13532
Transition-metal ions (Cu2+ and Zn2+) play critical roles in the Abeta plaque formation. However, precise roles of the metal ions in the Abeta amyloidogenesis have been controversial. In this study, the molecular mechanism of the metal-induced Abeta oligomerization was investigated with extensive metal ion titration NMR experiments. Upon additions of the metal ions, the N-terminal region (1-16) of the Abeta (1-40) peptide was selectively perturbed. In particular, polar residues 4-8 and 13-15 were more strongly affected by the metal ions, suggesting that those regions may be the major binding sites of the metal ions. The NMR signal changes of the N-terminal region were dependent on the peptide concentrations (higher peptide concentrations resulted in stronger signal changes), suggesting that the metal ions facilitate the intermolecular contact between the Abeta peptides. The Abeta (1-40) peptides (>30 microM) were eventually oligomerized even at low temperature (3 degrees C), where the Abeta peptides are stable as monomeric forms without the metal ions. The real-time oligomerization process was monitored by 1H/15N HSQC NMR experiments, which provided the first residue-specific structural transition information. Hydrophobic residues 12-21 initially underwent conformational changes due to the intermolecular interactions. After the initial structural rearrangements, the C-terminal residues (32-40) readjusted their conformations presumably for effective oligomerization. Similar structural changes of the metal-free Abeta (1-40) peptides were also observed in the presence of the preformed oligomers, suggesting that the conformational transitions may be the general molecular mechanism of the Abeta (1-40) amyloidogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
The caseins (alphas1, alphas2, beta, and kappa) are phosphoproteins present in bovine milk that have been studied for over a century and whose structures remain obscure. Here we describe the chemical synthesis and structure elucidation of the N-terminal segment (1-44) of bovine kappa-casein, the protein which maintains the micellar structure of the caseins. kappa-Casein (1-44) was synthesised by highly optimised Boc solid-phase peptide chemistry and characterised by mass spectrometry. Structure elucidation was carried out by circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. CD analysis demonstrated that the segment was ill defined in aqueous medium but in 30% trifluoroethanol it exhibited considerable helical structure. Further, NMR analysis showed the presence of a helical segment containing 26 residues which extends from Pro8 to Arg34. This is the first report which demonstrates extensive secondary structure within the casein class of proteins.  相似文献   

13.
The hydroxy protons of the disaccharide moiety in the glycopeptide Val-[beta-Gal(1-->3)-alpha-GalNAc(1-->O)]-Thr-His-Pro-Gly-Tyr (1) have been investigated in aqueous solution using (1)H NMR spectroscopy. The chemical shifts (delta), coupling constants ((3)J(CH,OH)), temperature coefficients (d delta/dT), exchange rates (k(ex)), and NOEs have been measured. The data show that the O(2')H of Gal has a reduced contact with water due to steric interference caused by the 2-acetamido group of GalNAc. No interaction, in terms of hydrogen bonding exists between the disaccharide and the peptide moieties, but the rotation around the sugar-peptide linkage is restricted.  相似文献   

14.
Calculated and experimental (1)H, (13)C and (19)F chemical shifts were compared in BKM-824, a cyclic bradykinin antagonist mimic, c[Ava(1)-Igl(2)-Ser(3)-DF5F(4)-Oic(5)-Arg(6)] (Ava=5-aminovaleric acid, Igl=alpha-(2-indanyl)glycine, DF5F=pentafluorophenylalanine, Oic=(2S,3aS,7aS)-octahydroindole-2-carboxylic acid). The conformation of BKM-824 has been studied earlier by NMR spectroscopy (M. Miskolzie et al., J. Biomolec. Struct. Dyn. 17, 947-955 (2000)). All NMR structures have qualitatively the same backbone structure but there is considerable variation in the side chain conformations. We have carried out quantum mechanical optimization for three representative NMR structures at the B3LYP/6-31G* level, constraining the backbone dihedral angles at their NMR structure values, followed by NMR chemical shift calculations at the optimized structures with the 6-311G** basis set. There is an intramolecular hydrogen bond at Ser(3) in the optimized structures. The experimental (13)C chemical shifts at five C(alpha) positions as well as at the Cbeta, Cgamma and Cdelta position of Ava(1), which forms part of the backbone, are well reproduced by the calculations, confirming the NMR backbone structure. A comparison between the calculated and experimental H(beta) chemical shifts in Igl(2) shows that the dominant conformation at this residue is gauche. Changes of proton chemical shifts with the scan of the chi(1) angle in DF5F(4) suggest that chi(1)180 degrees. The calculated (1)H and (13)C chemical shifts are in good agreement with experiment at the rigid residue Oic(5). None of the models gives accurate results for Arg(6), presumably because of its positive charge. Our study indicates that calculated NMR shifts can be used as additional constraints in conjunction with NMR data to determine protein conformations. However, to be computationally effective, a database of chemical shifts in small peptide fragments should be precalculated.  相似文献   

15.
J P Laussac  B Sarkar 《Biochemistry》1984,23(12):2832-2838
As a basis for understanding the role of albumin in the transport of metal ions, detailed investigations have been carried out to elucidate the structure of Ni(II)- and Cu(II)-binding site of the peptide residue corresponding to the NH2-terminal peptide fragment 1-24 of human serum albumin by 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy. These studies have been conducted in aqueous medium at different pH values and at different ligand/metal ratios. The results show the following: (i) Diamagnetic Ni(II) complex and paramagnetic Cu(II) complex are in slow exchange NMR time scale. (ii) Titration results of Ni(II)-bound form of peptide 1-24 show the presence of a 1:1 complex in the wide pH range (6.0-11.0), and the same stoichiometry is proposed for Cu(II) as well. (iii) Analysis of the spectra suggests that both Ni(II) and Cu(II) have one specific binding site at the NH2-terminal tripeptide segment (Asp-Ala-His...) involving the Asp alpha-NH2, His N(1) imidazole, two deprotonated peptide nitrogens (Ala NH and His NH), and the Asp COO- group. (iv) Complexation of Ni(II) and Cu(II) causes conformational change near the metal-binding site of the polypeptide chain, but there is no other binding group involved besides those in the first three residues.  相似文献   

16.
Hoh F  Cerdan R  Kaas Q  Nishi Y  Chiche L  Kubo S  Chino N  Kobayashi Y  Dumas C  Aumelas A 《Biochemistry》2004,43(48):15154-15168
Previous structural studies on the [Lys((-2))-Arg((-1))]endothelin-1 peptide (KR-ET-1), 540-fold less potent than ET-1, strongly suggested the presence of an intramolecular Arg(-1)-Asp(8) (R(-1)-D(8)) salt bridge that was also observed in the shorter [Lys((-2))-Arg((-1))-des(17-21)]endothelin-1 derivative (KR-CSH-ET). In addition, for these two analogues, we have shown that the Lys-Arg dipeptide, which belongs to the prosequence, significantly improves the formation of the native disulfide bonds (>or=96% instead of approximately 70% for ET-1). In contrast to what was inferred from NMR data, molecular dynamics simulations suggested that such an intramolecular salt bridge would be unstable. The KR-CSH-ET peptide has now been crystallized at pH 5.0 and its high-resolution structure determined ab initio at 1.13 A using direct methods. Unexpectedly, KR-CSH-ET was shown to be a head-to-tail symmetric dimer, and the overall interface involves two intermolecular R(-1)-D(8) salt bridges, a two-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet, and hydrophobic contacts. Molecular dynamics simulations carried out on this dimer clearly showed that the two intermolecular salt bridges were in this case very stable. Sedimentation equilibrium experiments unambiguously confirmed that KR-ET-1 and KR-CSH-ET also exist as dimers in solution at pH 5.0. On the basis of the new dimeric structure, previous NMR data were reinterpreted. Structure calculations were performed using 484 intramolecular and 38 intermolecular NMR-derived constraints. The solution and the X-ray structures of the dimer are very similar (mean rmsd of 0.85 A). Since the KR dipeptide at the N-terminus of KR-CSH-ET is present in the prosequence, it can be hypothesized that similar intermolecular salt bridges could be involved in the in vivo formation of the native disulfide bonds of ET-1. Therefore, it appears to be likely that the prosequence does assist the ET-1 folding in a chaperone-like manner before successive cleavages that yield the bioactive ET-1 hormone.  相似文献   

17.
Degradation of the HIV receptor CD4 by the proteasome, mediated by the HIV-1 protein Vpu, is crucial for the release of fully infectious virions. To promote CD4 degradation Vpu has to be phosphorylated on a motif DSGXXS, which is conserved in several signalling proteins known to be degraded by the proteasome upon phosphorylation. Such phosphorylation is required for the interaction of Vpu with the ubiquitin ligase SCF-beta-TrCP that triggers CD4 degradation by the proteasome. In the present work, we used two peptides of 22 amino acids between residues 41 and 62 of Vpu. Vpu41-62 was predicted to form an alpha-helix-flexible-alpha-helix including the phosphorylation motif DS52GNES56 and Vpu_P41-62 was phosphorylated at the two sites Ser52 and Ser56. We analysed the conformational change induced by the phosphorylation of this peptide on the residues Ser52 and Ser56. Homo- and heteronuclear NMR techniques were used to assess the structural influence of phosphorylation. The spectra of the free peptides, Vpu_P41-62 and Vpu41-62, in both H2O (at pH 3.5 and 7.2) and a 1:1 mixture of H2O and trifluoroethanol were completely assigned by a combined application of several two-dimensional proton NMR methods. Analysis of the short- and medium-range NOE connectivities and of the secondary chemical shifts indicated that the peptide segment (42-49) shows a less well-defined helix propensity. The Vpu_P41-62 domain of residues 50-62 forms a loop with the phosphate group pointing away, a short beta-strand and a flexible extended 'tail' of residues 60-62. Residues 50-60 exhibit alpha-proton NMR secondary chemical shift changes from random coil toward more beta-like structure with the combined (temperature, solvent and pH) NMR and molecular calculation experiments. Differences in this molecular region 50-62 suggest that conformational changes of Vpu_P play an important role in Vpu_P-induced degradation of CD4 molecules.  相似文献   

18.
FT-IR spectroscopic studies of dynorphin A(1-13) in H2O and D2O are utilized to derive the aqueous phase secondary structure of the opioid peptide. Resolution enhancement of the amide I region of dynorphin A(1-13) in H2O revealed a doublet at 1652 cm-1 and 1669 cm-1 which are interpreted as indicative of "unordered" and extended structures. From FT-IR and 1H NMR deuterium exchange studies, the peptide NH groups appeared to be solvent accessible which is suggestive of an essentially extended structure with aperiodically interwoven "unordered" structure. The results are consistent with Raman Spectroscopic (Rapaka et al., (1987) Int. J. Peptide Protein Res. 30:284-287) and 2D NMR studies (Huang et al. submitted), from our laboratory.  相似文献   

19.
The three-dimensional structure of the mouse epidermal growth factor (EGF) in solution was studied by comparison of the 1H NMR spectra of alpha EGF (1-53) and beta EGF (2-53, des-asparaginyl 1 form). Using pH dependence of chemical shifts and a two-dimensional difference spectrum, the effect of the N-terminal deletion was investigated based on the complete assignment of the proton resonances. The affected residues were all found to be located exactly in the triple-stranded, beta-sheet core in the N-terminal domain of the EGF molecule.  相似文献   

20.
We have utilized CD and NMR spectroscopy to study the conformation of the troponin I (TnI) inhibitory peptide [TnI(96-115)] free in solution and when bound to troponin C (TnC). Analysis of the CD spectrum of the free peptide in aqueous solution indicates it is only approximately 3% helix. Upon complex formation with TnC, there is no change in total helix content compared to the sum of the free components. The NMR data support a predominantly extended conformation for the free peptide. TnI(96-115) bound to TnC was selectively observed by NMR using deuterated TnC (dTnC). For the 1:1 ratio of TnI(96-115) to dTnC used, 95% of the peptide was bound to dTnC. The chemical shifts of the TnC-bound peptide resonances are similar to those of the free peptide, indicating that the change in peptide conformation as a consequence of binding to TnC is small. For the TnC-bound TnI(96-115) peptide, the ratios of sequential Halpha-HN to intraresidue HN-Halpha NOE cross-peak volumes support a predominantly extended conformation, possibly kinked at Gly104. The results presented here are in agreement with sequence analysis predictions for TnI(96-115) as a free peptide or within the intact TnI sequence. The predominantly extended structure for the 96-115 inhibitory sequence segment of TnI with a kink at Gly104 may facilitate its binding alternately to actin or TnC in response to the Ca2+ signals that control thick and thin filament interactions during the contractile cycle.  相似文献   

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