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1.
The acid-catalyzed hydrogen exchange rate constants kH, and the base-catalyzed rate constants kOH, have been determined (in the preceding paper) for the 25 most rapidly exchanging NH groups of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. Most of these NH groups are at the protein-solvent interface. The correlation of kH, but not kOH, with the static accessibility and hydrogen bonding of the peptide carbonyl O atom indicates that the mechanism of acid catalysis in proteins involves O-protonation. Agreement between the ionic strength dependence observed for kH and kOH and the ionic strength dependence calculated for an O-protonation mechanism supports this conclusion. N-protonation for acid catalysis, as well as N-deprotonation for base catalysis, have traditionally been assumed in the mechanism of the chemical step in peptide amide proton exchange. A preference for the alternative O-protonation mechanism has far-reaching implications in the interpretation of protein hydrogen exchange kinetics. With an O-protonation mechanism, acid-catalyzed rates of surface NH groups are primarily a function of the average solvent accessibility of the carbonyl O atoms in the dynamic solution structure, while base-catalyzed rates of surface NH groups measure solvent accessibility of the peptide N. The relative dynamic accessibilities of peptide O atoms, as measured by relative values of kH (corrected for electrostatic effects), correlate with O static accessibilities in the crystal structure. A lower correlation of static accessibility of N atoms with kOH is observed for surface NH groups in peptide groups in which the carbonyl O is not hydrogen bonded. For some surface NH groups, the observed pH of minimum rate, pHmin, deviates widely from the pHmin of model compounds. This is explained as the combined result of electrostatic effects and of the differences in accessibility of the carbonyl O and N atoms that result in a change in the relative values of kH and kOH as compared to those of model peptides. A mechanism whereby exchange of interior sites is catalyzed by interactions of catalysis ions with protein surface atoms via charge transfer is suggested.  相似文献   

2.
Hydrogen exchange rate constants of the 25 most rapidly exchanging peptide amide protons in bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor have been determined over a range of pH that spans pH min, the pH of minimum rate. Most of these are on the protein surface, exposed to solvent and not hydrogen bonded in the crystal structure. Contrary to commonly held assumptions, the exchange kinetics of surface NH groups are not equivalent to the kinetics of NH groups in peptides in the extended configuration. All surface NH groups exchange more slowly than NH groups in model peptides, with rate constants distributed over a range of more than two orders of magnitude. In addition, their pH min values vary widely. For most of the surface NH groups, pH min is lower than in model compounds and, for several, pH min is less than 1. These results indicate that the local environment of the surface peptide groups when the exchange event occurs is very different from that of extended peptides. Analysis based on consideration of an O-protonation mechanism for acid catalysis and of electrostatic effects on exchange kinetics further indicates (see the accompanying paper) that, in general, exchange of surface NH groups occurs from a conformation of the protein approximated by the crystal structure. The 1H-2H exchange rate constants were measured from 300 MHz nuclear magnetic resonance spectra in which assigned surface N1H resonances are resolved by the use of partially deuterated protein samples. A marked pH dependence of the chemical shifts observed in the pH range 1 to 4.5 for several surface NH groups reflects the titration of nearby carboxyl groups.  相似文献   

3.
On the pH dependence of amide proton exchange rates in proteins.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We have analyzed the pH dependencies of published amide proton exchange rates (kex) in three proteins: bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI), bull seminal plasma proteinase inhibitor IIA (BUSI IIA), and calbindin D9K. The base-catalyzed exchange rate constants (kOH) of solvent exposed amides in BPTI are lower for residues with low peptide carbonyl exposure, showing that the environment around the carbonyl oxygen influences kOH. We also examined the possible importance of an exchange mechanism that involves formations of imidic acid intermediates along chains of hydrogen-bonded peptides in the three proteins. By invoking this "relayed imidic acid exchange mechanism," which should be essentially acid-catalyzed, we can explain the surprisingly high pHmin (the pH value at which kex reaches a minimum) found for the non-hydrogen-bonded amide protons in the beta-sheet in BPTI. The successive increase of pHmin along a chain of hydrogen-bonded peptides from the free amide to the free carbonyl, observed in BPTI, can be explained as an increasing contribution of the proposed mechanism in this direction of the chain. For BUSI IIA (pH 4-5) and calbindin D9K (pH 6-7) the majority of amide protons with negative pH dependence of kex are located in chains of hydrogen-bonded peptides; this situation is shown to be consistent with the proposed mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
The exchange kinetics of the slowest exchanging BPTI beta-sheet protons are complex compared to model peptides; the activation energy, E alpha, and the pH dependence are temperature dependent. We have measured the exchange kinetics in the range pH 1--11, 33--71 degrees C, particularly the temperature dependence. The data are fit to a model in which exchange of each proton is determined by two discrete dynamical processes, one with E alpha approximately 65 kcal/mol and less than first order dependence on catalyst ion, and one with E alpha 20--30 kcal/mol and approaching first order in catalyst ion. The low activation energy process is the mechanism of interest in the native conformation of globular proteins and involves low energy, small amplitude fluctuations; the high activation energy process involves major unfolding. The model is simple, has a precedent in the hydrogen exchange literature, and explains quantitatively the complex feature of the exchange kinetics of single protons in BPTI, including the following. For the slowest exchanging protons, in the range 36 degrees--68 degrees C, E alpha is approximately 65 kcal/mol at pH approximately 4, 20--30 kcal/mol at pH greater than 10, and rises to approximately 65 kcal/mol with increasing temperature at pH 6--10; the Arrhenius plots converge around 70 degrees C; the pH of minimum rate, pHmin, is greater than 1 pH unit higher at 68 degrees C than for model compounds; and at high pH, the pH-rate profiles shift to steeper slope; the exchange rates around pHmin are correlated to the thermal unfolding temperature in BPTI derivatives (Wagner and Wüthrich, 1979, J. Mol. Biol. 130:31). For the more rapidly exchanging protons in BPTI the model accounts for the observation of normal pHmin and E alpha of 20--30 kcal/mol at all pH's. The important results of our analysis are (a) rates for exchange from the folded state of proteins are not correlated to thermal lability, as proposed by Wuthrich et al. (1979, J. Mol. Biol. 134:75); (b) the unfolding rate for the BPTI cooperative thermal transition is equal to the observed exchange rates of the slowest exchanging protons between pH 8.4--9.6, 51 degrees C; (c) the rates for exchange of single protons from folded BPTI are consistent with our previous hydrogen-tritium exchange results and with a penetration model of the dynamic processes limiting hydrogen exchange.  相似文献   

5.
In aqueous solution, exchanging peptide NH protons experience two environments, that of the peptide itself with a relatively slow diffusion coefficient and that of the water solvent with a faster diffusion coefficient. Although in slow exchange on the NMR chemical shift timescale, the magnetic field gradient dependence of the NH peak intensities in an experiment used to measure diffusion coefficients reflects the relative time periods spent in the two environments and this allows the determination of the relative solvent accessibility of exchangeable protons in peptides or proteins. To test this approach, the magnetic field gradient dependent intensities of the chemically shifted amide and amine NH protons of the peptide antibiotic viomycin have been measured using the high resolution longitudinal-eddy-current-delay (LED) NMR method incorporating solvent water peak elimination by non-excitation. The NH resonances of viomycin have been assigned previously and their relative exchange rates determined. Here, the gradient dependence of each NH proton intensity is reported, and these, after a bi- exponential least squares fitting, yield the fractional lifetimes of the protons spent in the peptide and water environments during the diffusion period of the experiment.  相似文献   

6.
The cyclododecapeptide, (Ala1-Pro2-Gly3-Val4-Gly5-Val6)2, was synthesized and its secondary structure was evaluated from extensive studies in dimethyl sulphoxide, trifluoroethanol and water using NMR methods. A selective decoupling technique in 13C-NMR has been utilized in order to assign the C=O carbon resonances. Temperature dependence of the peptide NH protons and the solvent perturbation of the peptide NH and C=O resonances show the occurrence in all solvents of a beta-turn (a 10-membered H-bond between the Val4 NH and Ala1 C=O) and a gamma-turn, an 11-membered H-bond between the Gly3 NH and the Gly5 C=O; and a possible 14-membered H-bond between the Ala1 NH and the Val4 C=O in dimethyl sulphoxide and trifluoroethanol. These secondary structural features are compared with the linear polyhexapeptide and found the the beta-turn and the gamma-turn are the common conformational features of these peptide systems.  相似文献   

7.
K Akasaka  T Inoue  H Hatano  C K Woodward 《Biochemistry》1985,24(12):2973-2979
The hydrogen isotope exchange kinetics of the 10 slowest exchanging resonances in the 1H NMR spectrum of Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) have been determined at pH 7-11 and 30-60 degrees C. These resonances are assigned to peptide amide protons in the beta-sheet core that comprises the extensive protein-protein interface of the tightly bound SSI dimer. The core protons are atypical in that their exchange rates are orders of magnitude slower than those for all other SSI protons. When they do exchange at temperatures greater than 50 degrees C, they do so as a set and with a very high temperature coefficient. The pH dependence of the exchange rate constants is also atypical. Exchange rates are approximately first order in hydroxyl ion dependence at pH less than 8.5 and greater than 9.5 and pH independent between pH 8.5 and 9.5. The pH dependence and temperature dependence of the SSI proton exchange rates are interpreted by the two-process model [Woodward, C. K., & Hilton, B. D. (1980) Biophys. J. 32, 561-575]. The results suggest that in the average solution structure of SSI, an unusual mobility of secondary structural elements at the protein surface is, in a sense, compensated by an unusual rigidity and inaccessibility of the beta-sheet core at the dimer interface.  相似文献   

8.
The exchange reaction of the peptide NH protons of a microbial protease inhibitor (Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor) with deuterium atoms in 2H2O (p2H 6.8) has been studied by proton magnetic resonance in the temperature range 56-71 degrees C. Both slowly and rapidly exchanging processes have been observed. The number of slowly exchanging protons is estimated to be 25 +/- 2 per subunit of the protein molecule. The decay of the slowly exchanging proton signals follows a single time-exponential function at each temperature. The observed first-order rate constants have been analyzed to give the denaturated fraction of the protein as a function of temperature with a consequent enthalpy (56 kcal/mol) and an entropy (137 cal/degree per mol) of denaturation. The results indicate the high conformational stability of this protein against heat denaturation.  相似文献   

9.
The pH dependence of hydrogen exchange in proteins   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The static accessibility modified discrete charge model for electrostatic interactions in proteins is extended to the prediction of the pH dependence of hydrogen exchange reactions. The exchange rate profiles of buried amide protons are shown to follow the calculated pH dependence of the electrostatic component of protein stability. Rate profiles are calculated for individual buried amide protons in ribonuclease S and bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. The electrostatic free energy of stabilization of the protein and the energy required to bring the catalytic ion to an exchange site are expressed as an apparent, pH-dependent contribution to the activation energy. Changes in the electrostatic stabilization of the proteins affect the calculated exchange rate for buried amide protons by more than 1000, while local field effects raise or lower the predicted exchange rates by less than 100. The pH dependence of exchangeable protons at the protein surface, such as the C-2 imidazole protons, is shown to follow the estimated energy required to introduce the catalytic ion at the exchange site. These calculations are discussed in terms of current models for proton exchange which incorporate the dynamic nature of the structure to explain exchange data from the interior of a protein.  相似文献   

10.
W Gallagher  F Tao  C Woodward 《Biochemistry》1992,31(19):4673-4680
Hydrogen exchange rate constants for the 17 slowest exchanging amide NH groups in bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) were measured in solution and in form II and form III crystals. All 17 amide hydrogens are buried and intramolecularly hydrogen bonded in the crystal structure, except Lys 41 which is buried and hydrogen bonded to a buried water. Large-scale crystallization procedures were developed for these experiments, and rate constants for both crystal and solution exchange were measured by 1H NMR spectroscopy of exchange-quenched samples in solution. Two conditions of pH and temperature, pH 9.8 and 35 degrees C, and pH 9.4 and 25 degrees C, bring two groups of hydrogens into the experimental time window (minutes to weeks). One consists of the 10 slowest exchanging hydrogens, all of which are associated with the central beta-sheet of BPTI. The second group consists of seven more rapidly exchanging hydrogens, which are distributed throughout the molecule, primarily in a loop or turn. In both groups, most hydrogens exchange more slowly in crystals, but there is considerable variation in the degree to which the exchange is depressed in crystals. Many differences observed for the more rapidly exchanging hydrogens can be attributed to local surface effects arising from intermolecular contacts in the crystal lattice. Within the slower group, however, a very large effect on exchange of Ile 18 and Tyr 35 appears to be selectively transmitted through the matrix of the molecule.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
G D Henry  J H Weiner  B D Sykes 《Biochemistry》1987,26(12):3626-3634
Hydrogen-exchange rates have been measured for individual assigned amide protons in M13 coat protein, a 50-residue integral membrane protein, using a 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) equilibrium isotope shift technique. The locations of the more rapidly exchanging amides have been determined. In D2O solutions, a peptide carbonyl resonance undergoes a small upfield isotope shift (0.08-0.09 ppm) from its position in H2O solutions; in 1:1 H2O/D2O mixtures, the carbonyl line shape is determined by the exchange rate at the adjacent nitrogen atom. M13 coat protein was labeled biosynthetically with 13C at the peptide carbonyls of alanine, glycine, phenylalanine, proline, and lysine, and the exchange rates of 12 assigned amide protons in the hydrophilic regions were measured as a function of pH by using the isotope shift method. This equilibrium technique is sensitive to the more rapidly exchanging protons which are difficult to measure by classical exchange-out experiments. In proteins, structural factors, notably H bonding, can decrease the exchange rate of an amide proton by many orders of magnitude from that observed in the freely exposed amides of model peptides such as poly(DL-alanine). With corrections for sequence-related inductive effects [Molday, R. S., Englander, S. W., & Kallen, R. G. (1972) Biochemistry 11, 150-158], the retardation of amide exchange in sodium dodecyl sulfate solubilized coat protein has been calculated with respect to poly(DL-alanine). The most rapidly exchanging protons, which are retarded very little or not at all, are shown to occur at the N- and C-termini of the molecule.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Ascidiacyclamide (ASC), cyclo(-Ile1-Oxz2-d-Val3-Thz4-)2 (Oxz=oxazoline and Thz=thiazole) has a C2-symmetric sequence, and the relationships between its conformation and symmetry have been studied. In a previous study, we performed asymmetric modifications in which an Ile residue was replaced by Gly, Leu or Phe to disturb the symmetry [Doi et al. (1999) Biopolymers49, 459-469]. In this study, the modifications were extended. The Ile1 residue was replaced by Gly, Ala, aminoisobutyric acid (Aib), Val, Leu, Phe or d-Ile, and the d-Val3 residue was replaced by Val. The structures of these analogs were analyzed by X-ray diffraction, 1H NMR and CD techniques. X-Ray diffraction analyses revealed that the [Ala1], [Aib1] and [Phe1]ASC analogs are folded, whereas [Val1]ASC has a square form. These structures are the first examples of folded structures for ASC analogs in the crystal state and are similar to the previously reported structures of [Gly1] and [Phe1]ASC in solution. The resonances of amide NH and Thz CH protons linearly shift with temperature changes; in particular, those of [Aib1], [d-Ile1] and [Val3]ASCs exhibited a large temperature dependence. DMSO titration caused nonlinear shifts of proton resonances for all analogs and largely affected [d-Ile1] and [Val3]ASCs. A similar tendency was observed upon the addition of acetone to peptide solutions. Regarding peptide concentration changes, amide NH and Thz CH protons of [Gly1]ASC showed a relatively large dependence. CD spectra of these analogs indicated approximately two patterns in MeCN solution, which were related to the crystal structures. However, all spectra showed a similar positive Cotton effect in TFE solution, except that of [Val3]ASC. In the cytotoxicity test using P388 cells, [Val1]ASC exhibited the strongest activity, whereas the epimers of ASC ([d-Ile1] and [Val3]ASCs), showed fairly moderate activities.  相似文献   

13.
H Haruyama  Y Q Qian  K Wüthrich 《Biochemistry》1989,28(10):4312-4317
With proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 22 degrees C and pD 4.5, individual exchange rates in the range from 2 X 10(-5) to 1 X 10(-1) min-1 were observed for 23 amide protons in recombinant desulfatohirudin. The remaining 38 backbone amide protons exchange more rapidly than 1 X 10(-1) min-1. All 23 slowly exchanging protons are located in the polypeptide segment from residue 4 to residue 42, which forms a well-defined globular domain. Three different breathing modes of this molecular region are manifested in the exchange data, which appear to be correlated with the location of the three disulfide bonds. Chemical shift changes larger than 0.15 ppm between pH 2.5 and pH 5.0 arising from through-space interactions with carboxyl groups were observed for seven backbone amide protons. Two of these shifts can be explained by hydrogen bonds in the core of the protein, Gly 25 NH-Glu 43 O epsilon and Ser 32 NH-Asp 33 O delta, and two others by intraresidual NH-O epsilon interactions in Glu 61 and Glu 62. The remaining three pH shifts for Glu 35, Cys 39, and Ile 59 imply the existence of transient interactions between the molecular core and the flexible C-terminal segment 49-65, which have so far not been characterized by nuclear Overhauser effects or other conformational constraints.  相似文献   

14.
The preceding article shows that there are eight highly protected amide protons in the S-peptide moiety of RNAase S at pH 5, 0 degrees C. The residues with protected NH protons are 7 to 13, whose amide protons are H-bonded in the 3 to 13 alpha-helix, and Asp 14, whose NH proton is H-bonded to the CO group of Val47. We describe here the exchange behavior of these eight protected protons as a function of pH. Exchange rates of the individual NH protons are measured by 1H nuclear magnetic resonance in D2O. A procedure is used for specifically labeling with 1H only these eight NH protons. The resonance assignments of the eight protons are made chiefly by partial exchange, through correlating the resonance intensities in spectra taken when the peptide is bound and when it is dissociated from S-protein in 3.5 M-urea-d4, in D2O, pH 2.3, -4 degrees C. The two remaining assignments are made and some other assignments are checked by measurements of the nuclear Overhauser effect between adjacent NH protons of the alpha-helix. There is a transition in exchange behavior between pH 3, where the helix is weakly protected against exchange, and pH 5 where the helix is much more stable. At pH 3.1, 20 degrees C, exchange rates are uniform within the helix within a factor of two, after correction for different intrinsic exchange rates. The degree of protection within the helix is only 10 to 20-fold at this pH. At pH 5.1, 20 degrees C, the helix is more stable by two orders of magnitude and exchange occurs preferentially from the N-terminal end. At both pH values the NH proton of Asp 14, which is just outside the helix, is less protected by an order of magnitude than the adjacent NH protons inside the helix. Opening of the helix can be observed below pH 3.7 by changes in chemical shifts of the NH protons in the helix. At pH 2.4 the changes are 25% of those expected for complete opening. Helix opening is a fast reaction on the n.m.r. time scale (tau much less than 1 ms) unlike the generalized unfolding of RNAase S which is a slow reaction. Dissociation of S-peptide from S-protein in native RNAase S at pH 3.0 also is a slow reaction. Opening of the helix below pH 3.7 is a two-state reaction, as judged by comparing chemical shifts with exchange rates. The exchange rates at pH 3.1 are predicted correctly from the changes in chemical shift by assuming that helix opening is a two-state reaction. At pH values above 3.7, the nature of the helix opening reaction changes. These results indicate that at least one partially unfolded state of RNAase S is populated in the low pH unfolding transition.  相似文献   

15.
Solvent exchange of 18O-labeled buried water in bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI), trypsin, and trypsin-BPTI complex is measured by high-precision isotope ratio mass spectrometry. Buried water is labeled by equilibration of the protein in 18O-enriched water. Protein samples are then rapidly dialyzed against water of normal isotope composition by gel filtration and stored. The exchangeable 18O label eluting with the protein in 10-300 s is determined by an H2O-CO2 equilibration technique. Exchange of buried waters with solvent water is complete before 10-15 s in BPTI, trypsin, and BPTI-trypsin, as well as in lysozyme and carboxypeptidase measured as controls. When in-exchange dialysis and storage are carried out at pH greater than or equal to 2.5, trypsin-BPTI and trypsin, but not free BPTI, have the equivalent of one 18O atom that exchanges slowly (after 300 s and before several days). This oxygen is probably covalently bound to a specific site in trypsin. When in-exchange dialysis and storage are carried out at pH 1.1, the equivalent of three to seven 18O atoms per molecule is associated with the trypsin-BPTI complex, apparently due to nonspecific covalent 18O labeling of carboxyl groups at low pH. In addition to 18O exchange of buried waters, the hydrogen isotope exchange of buried NH groups H bonded to buried waters was also measured. Their base-catalyzed exchange rate constants are on the order of NH groups that in the crystal are exposed to solvent (static accessibility greater than 0) and hydrogen-bonded main chain O, and their pH min is similar to that for model compounds. The pH dependence of their exchange rate constants suggests that direct exchange with water may significantly contribute to their observed exchange rate.  相似文献   

16.
From a series of isotope-edited proton NMR spectra, amide proton exchange rates were measured at 20 degrees C, 30 degrees C, and 40 degrees C for a tightly bound 15N-labeled tripeptide inhibitor of porcine pepsin (IC50 = 1.7 X 10(-) M). Markedly different NH exchange rates were observed for the three amide protons of the bound inhibitor. The P1 NH exchanged much more slowly than the P2 NH and P3 NH. These results are discussed in terms of the relative solvent accessibility in the active site and the role of the NH protons of the inhibitor for hydrogen bonding to the enzyme. In this study a useful approach is demonstrated for obtaining NH exchange rates on ligands bound to biomacromolecules, the knowledge of which could be of potential utility in the design of therapeutically useful nonpeptide enzyme inhibitors from peptide leads.  相似文献   

17.
A previous comprehensive analysis of the pH dependence of native-state amide hydrogen (NH) exchange in turkey ovomucoid third domain (OMTKY3) yielded apparent opening and closing rate constants (k(op) and k(cl)) at 14 NH groups involved in global conformational changes. This analysis has been extended to 18 additional slowly exchanging NH groups. Quench-flow experiments were performed to monitor NH exchange in native OMTKY3 from neutral to very alkaline pH ( approximately 12) conditions. Above pH 10 the mechanism of exchange switched from one governed by a rapid equilibrium preceding the chemistry of exchange (i.e. EX2 exchange), to one where exchange was limited by the rate of opening (i.e. EX1 exchange). Kinetics of solvent exposure are now known for nearly all backbone NH groups in native OMTKY3, yielding rate constants that span five orders of magnitude, 0.004 to 200 s(-1).  相似文献   

18.
M G Zagorski  C J Barrow 《Biochemistry》1992,31(24):5621-5631
Beta-peptide is a major component of amyloid deposits in Alzheimer's disease. We report here a proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopic investigation of a synthetic peptide that is homologous to residues 1-28 of beta-peptide [abbreviated as beta-(1-28)]. The beta-(1-28) peptide produces insoluble beta-pleated sheet structures in vitro, similar to the beta-pleated sheet structures of beta-peptide in amyloid deposits in vivo. For peptide solutions in the millimolar range, in aqueous solution at pH 1-4 the beta-(1-28) peptide adopts a monomeric random coil structure, and at pH 4-7 the peptide rapidly precipitates from solution as an oligomeric beta-sheet structure, analogous to amyloid deposition in vivo. The NMR work shown here demonstrates that the beta-(1-28) peptide can adopt a monomeric alpha-helical conformation in aqueous trifluoroethanol solution at pH 1-4. Assignment of the complete proton NMR spectrum and the determination of the secondary structure were arrived at from interpretation of two-dimensional (2D) NMR data, primarily (1) nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE), (2) vicinal coupling constants between the amide (NH) and alpha H protons, and (3) temperature coefficients of the NH chemical shifts. The results show that at pH 1.0 and 10 degrees C the beta-(1-28) peptide adopts an alpha-helical structure that spans the entire primary sequence. With increasing temperature and pH, the alpha-helix unfolds to produce two alpha-helical segments from Ala2 to Asp7 and Tyr10 to Asn27. Further increases in temperature to 35 degrees C cause the Ala2-Asp7 section to become random coil, while the His13-Phe20 section stays alpha-helical. A mechanism involving unfavorable interactions between charged groups and the alpha-helix macrodipole is proposed for the alpha-helix----beta-sheet conversion observed at midrange pH.  相似文献   

19.
Synthesis, proton magnetic resonance and carbon-13 magnetic resonance characterizations, including complete assignments, are reported for the polyhexapeptide of elastin, HCO-Val(Ala1-Pro2-Gly3-Val4-Gly5-Val6)18-OMe. Temperature dependence of peptide NH chemical shifts and solvent dependence of peptide C-O chemical shifts have been determined in several solvents and have been interpreted in terms of four hydrogen bonded rings for each repeat of the polyhexapeptide. The more stable hydrogen bonded ring is a beta-turn involving Ala1C-O--HN-Val4. More dynamic hydrogen bonds are an 11-atom hydrogen bonded ring Gly3NH--O-C Gly5, a 7-atom hydrogen bonded ring (a gamma-turn) Gly3 C-O--NH-Gly5, and a 23-atom hydrogen bonded ring Val6inH--O-C Val6(i+1). This set of hydrogen bonds results in a right-handed beta-spiral structure with slightly more than two repeats (approximately 2.2) per turn of spiral. The beta-spiral structure is briefly discussed relative to data on the elastic fiber.  相似文献   

20.
In a native protein, the exchange of a peptide amide proton with solvent occurs by one of two pathways, either directly from the folded protein, or via unfolding, exchange taking place from the unfolded protein. From the thermal unfolding rate constants, the contribution of unfolding to the over-all kinetics as a function of solvent and temperature has been determined. Exchange involving unfolding of the protein is characterized by a high activation energy, in the range of 50 to 60 Cal per mol. The activiation energy (Eapp) of the rates of exchange directly from the folded protein is approximately 20 to 25 Cal per mol. Because for the proton transfer step, Eapp approximately equal to 20 Cal per mol, the activation energy for any contributing protein conformational process(es) is approximately equal to 0 to 5 Cal per mol. Most, if not all, of the peptide amide protons in a folded protein can exchange directly with solvent without the protein unfolding. The number of "slowly" exchanging protons at a given condition of pH and temperature is not related to a discrete structural unit, but rather to the distribution of observed rates within the broader distribution of actual rates. The large attenuation of hydrogen exchange rates in folded proteins, resulting in a distribution of first order rates over 6 orders of magnitude, is primarily due to the effects of restricted solvent accessibility of labile protons in the three-dimensional structure. Any protein conformational process, such as protein fluctuations, invoked to explain the solvent accessibility must be of low activation energy and attenuated by ethanol and other co-solvents (Woodward, C. K., Ellis, L. M., and Rosenberg, A. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 440-444).  相似文献   

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