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1.
The torsional potential functions Vt(phi) and Vt(psi) around single bonds N--C alpha and C alpha--C, which can be used in conformational studies of oligopeptides, polypeptides and proteins, have been derived, using crystal structure data of 22 globular proteins, fitting the observed distribution in the (phi, psi)-plane with the value of Vtot(phi, psi), using the Boltzmann distribution. The averaged torsional potential functions, obtained from various amino acid residues in L-configuration, are Vt(phi) = 1.0 cos (phi + 60 degrees); Vt(psi) = 0.5 cos (psi + 60 degrees) - 1.0 cos (2 psi + 30 degrees) - 0.5 cos (3 psi + 30 degrees). The dipeptide energy maps Vtot(phi, psi) obtained using these functions, instead of the normally accepted torsional functions, were found to explain various observations, such as the absence of the left-handed alpha helix and the C7 conformation, and the relatively high density of points near the line psi = 0 degrees. These functions derived from observational data on protein structures, will, it is hoped, explain various previously unexplained facts in polypeptide conformation.  相似文献   

2.
The shortest helices (three-length 3(10) and four-length alpha), most abundant among helices of different lengths, have been analyzed from a database of protein structures. A characteristic feature of three-length 3(10)-helices is the shifted backbone conformation for the C-terminal residue (phi,psi angles: -95 degrees,0 degrees ), compared to the rest of the helix (-62 degrees,-24 degrees ). The deviation can be attributed to the release of electrostatic repulsion between the carbonyl oxygen atoms at the two C-terminal residues and further stabilization (due to a more linear geometry) of an intrahelical hydrogen bond. A consequence of this non-canonical C-terminal backbone conformation can be a potential origin of helix kinks when a 3(10)-helix is sequence-contiguous at the alpha-helix N-terminal. An analysis of hydrogen bonding, as well as hydrophobic interactions in the shortest helices shows that capping interactions, some of them not observed for longer helices, dominate at the N termini. Further, consideration of the distribution of amino acid residues indicates that the shortest helices resemble the N-terminal end of alpha-helices rather than the C terminus, implying that the folding of helices may be initiated at the N-terminal end, which does not get propagated in the case of the shortest helices. Finally, pairwise comparison of beta-turns and the shortest helices, based on correlation matrices of site-specific amino acid composition, and the relative abundance of these short secondary structural elements, leads to a helix nucleation scheme that considers the formation of an isolated beta-turn (and not an alpha-turn) as the helix nucleation step, with shortest 3(10)-helices as intermediates between the shortest alpha-helix and the beta-turn. Our results ascribe an important role played by shortest 3(10)-helices in proteins with important structural and folding implications.  相似文献   

3.
The conformation of pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide with 27 residues (PACAP27) has been determined by two-dimensional NMR and CD spectroscopies and distance geometry in 25% methanol. Residues 9-20 and 22-25 have well-defined conformations but other residues do not show ordered conformations. The conformation of residues 9-20 is composed of three distinct regions of beta turn-like conformation (residues 9-12), alpha helix (residues 12-14) and the looser helical conformation (residues 15-20), while residues 22-24 form alpha helix. PACAP27 has a 2 helices separated by a disordered region similar to a VIP analog reported by Fry et al. but is distinct from the VIP analog in the position of the first helix, which is shifted by 2 residues toward the C-terminus, and in the form of the second helix [Fry, D.C., Madison, V.S., Bolin, D.R., Greeley, D.N., Toome, V. and Wegrzynski, B.B. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 2399-2409].  相似文献   

4.
Z Zhang  S M Pascal  T A Cross 《Biochemistry》1992,31(37):8822-8828
A conformational transition is described for the polypeptide, gramicidin A, in which a dimer that forms a left-handed intertwined antiparallel helix is converted to a single-stranded amino terminus to amino terminus right-handed helix. The starting structure is determined here by solution NMR methods while reference is made to the well-established folding motif of gramicidin in a lipid bilayer for the ultimate conformation of this transition. Furthermore, an organic solvent system of benzene and ethanol in which gramicidin has a unique conformation is identified. This conformation is shown to be very similar to that derived from X-ray diffraction of crystals prepared from a similar solvent system.  相似文献   

5.
The serendipitous observation of a C-H cdots, three dots, centered O hydrogen bond mediated polypeptide chain reversal in synthetic peptide helices has led to a search for the occurrence of a similar motif in protein structures. From a dataset of 634 proteins, 1304 helices terminating in a Schellman motif have been examined. The C-H triplebond O interaction between the T-4 C(alpha)H and T+1 Cz doublebond O group (C triplebond O< or =3.5A) becomes possible only when the T+1 residue adopts an extended beta conformation (T is defined as the helix terminating residue adopting an alpha(L) conformation). In all, 111 examples of this chain reversal motif have been identified and the compositional and conformational preferences at positions T-4, T, and T+1 determined. A marked preference for residues like Ser, Glu and Gln is observed at T-4 position with the motif being further stabilized by the formation of a side-chain-backbone O triplebond H-N hydrogen bond involving the side-chain of residue T-4 and the N-H group of residue T+3. In as many as 57 examples, the segment following the helix was extended with three to four successive residues in beta conformation. In a majority of these cases, the succeeding beta strand lies approximately antiparallel with the helix, suggesting that the backbone C-H triplebond O interactions may provide a means of registering helices and strands in an antiparallel orientation. Two examples were identified in which extended registry was detected with two sets of C-H cdots, three dots, centered O hydrogen bonds between (T-4) C(alpha)H triplebond O (T+1) and (T-8) C(alpha)H triplebondC doublebond O (T+3).  相似文献   

6.
The immunological properties of the group B meningococcal alpha(2-8)-linked sialic acid polysaccharide have been rationalized in terms of a model where the random coil nature of the polymer can be described by the presence of local helices. The conformational versatility of the alpha NeuAc(2-8)alpha NeuAc linkage has been explored by NMR studies at 600 MHz in conjunction with potential energy calculations for colominic acid, an alpha(2-8)NeuAc polymer, and the trisaccharide alpha NeuAc(2-8)alpha NeuAc(2-8)beta NeuAc. Potential energy calculations were used to estimate the energetically favorable conformers and to describe the wide range of helices which the polymer can adopt. No unique conformer was found to satisfy all NMR constraints, and only ensemble averaged nuclear Overhauser enhancements could correctly simulate the experimental data. Conformational differences between the polymer and the trisaccharide could be best explained in terms of slight changes in the relative distribution of conformers in solution. Similar helical parameters for the alpha(2-8)NeuAc polymer and poly(A) were proposed as the basis for their cross-reactivity to a monoclonal antibody IgMNOV. The unusual length dependency for binding of oligosaccharide to group B specific antibodies was postulated to arise from the recognition of a high-order local helix with an extended conformation which was not highly populated in solution.  相似文献   

7.
Conformational equilibria of valine studied by dynamics simulation.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The conformational probability distribution of a valine residue in the valine dipeptide and of the valine side chain in an alpha-helix, as well as the change in helix stability for replacing alanine with valine, has been calculated by molecular dynamics simulations of explicitly hydrated systems: dipeptide, tetrapeptide and 10-, 14- and 18-residue oligoalanine helices. All computed free-energy differences are means from at least eight separate slow-growth simulations, four in each direction and are reported with their root-mean-square deviations. Different values for the change in free energy of folding (delta delta G degrees) have been calculated with the use of forcefields having an all-atom and a central-atom representation of methyl groups, etc. The value obtained with the all-atom forcefield agrees well with new experimental values (3 kJ/mol = 0.7 kcal/mol). Furthermore, the most stable valine side-chain rotamer in the helix is different for these two representations. The most stable rotamer for the all atom conformation is the same one that predominates for valines in alpha-helices in proteins of known conformation. The lower conformational freedom of the valine side chain in the helix contributes 1 kJ/mol to the difference in stability computed with the all-atom potential; unfavorable interactions of the side chain with helix, even in the most stable conformation, further increase delta delta G degrees.  相似文献   

8.
The alpha-hemolysin (alpha HL) from Staphylococcus aureus causes the lysis of susceptible cells such as rabbit erythrocytes (rRBCs). Lysis is associated with the formation of a hexameric pore in the plasma membrane. Here we show that truncation mutants of alpha HL missing 2 to 22 N-terminal amino acids form oligomers on the surfaces of rRBCs but fail to lyse the cells. By contrast, mutants missing 3 or 5 amino acids at the C terminus are very inefficient at oligomerization but do lyse rRBCs, albeit extremely slowly. The C-terminal truncation mutants, retarded as monomers on the cell surface, undergo a conformational change in which the protease-sensitive loop located near the midpoint of the polypeptide chain becomes occluded. Judged by this criterion, polypeptides truncated at the N terminus, frozen as nonlytic oligomers, are in a similar conformation. A second proteolytic site near the N terminus of the polypeptide becomes inaccessible in the lytic pore formed by the wild-type polypeptide, supporting the idea that a second conformational change occurs upon pore formation. These findings suggest a pathway for assembly of the lytic pore in which alpha HL first binds to target cells as a monomer, which is converted to a nonlytic oligomeric intermediate before formation of the pore. In keeping with this model, an N-terminal truncation mutant blocks the slow lysis induced by a C-terminal truncation mutant, presumably by diverting the weakly lytic subunits into inactive oligomers.  相似文献   

9.
The polyproline type II (PPII) helix is a prevalent conformation in both folded and unfolded proteins, and is known to play important roles in a wide variety of biological processes. Polyproline itself can also form a type I (PPI) helix, which has a disparate conformation. Here, we use derivatives of polyproline, (Pro)10, (Hyp)10, (Flp)10, and (flp)10, where Hyp is (2S,4R)-4-hydroxyproline, Flp is (2S,4R)-4-fluoroproline, and flp is (2S,4S)-4-fluoroproline, to probe for a stereoelectronic effect on the conformation of polyproline. Circular dichroism spectral analyses show that 4R electron-with-drawing substituents stabilize a PPII helix relative to a PPI helix, even in a solvent that favors the PPI conformation, such as n-propanol. The stereochemistry at C4 ordains the relative stability of PPI and PPII helices, as (flp)10 forms a mixture of PPI and PPII helices in water and a PPI helix in n-propanol. The conformational preferences of (Pro)10 are intermediate between those of (Hyp)10/(Flp)10 and (flp)10. Interestingly, PPI helices of (flp)10 exhibit cold denaturation in n-propanol with a value of T(s) near 70 degrees C. Together, these data show that stereoelectronic effects can have a substantial impact on polyproline conformation and provide a rational means to stabilize a PPI or PPII helix.  相似文献   

10.
Structural features of double helices formed by polypeptides with alternating L- and D-amino acid residues were analysed. It was found that the map of short distances (less than 4 A) between protons of the two backbones is unique for each double helix type and even its fragment implies unambiguously parameters of the helix (i.e. parallel or antiparallel, handedness, pitch of helix, relative shift of polypeptide chains). By analysis of two-dimensional 1H-NMR spectra (COSY, RELSY, HOHAHA, NOESY), proton resonances of [Val1]gramicidin A (GA) in the ethanol solution were assigned. The results obtained show that the solution contains five stable conformations of GA in comparable concentrations. Monomer of GA is in a random coil conformation. Specific maps of short interproton distances for the other four species (1-4) were obtained by means of two dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy. The maps as well as spin-spin couplings of the H-NC alpha-H protons and solvent accessibilities of the individual amide groups correspond to four types of double helices pi pi LD 5,6 with 5.6 residues per turn. The double helices are related to the Veatch species 1-4 of GA. Species 1 and 2 are left-handed parallel double helices increase increase pi pi LD 5,6 with different relative shift of polypeptide chains. Species 3 is a left-handed antiparallel double helix increase decrease pi pi LD 5,6 and species 4 is a right-handed parallel double helix increase increase LD 5,6. In the dimers helices are fixed by the maximum number (28) of interbackbone hydrogen bonds NH...O = C possible for these structures. Species 1, 3 and 4 have C2 symmetry axes. Relationship between gramicidin A spatial structures induced by various media is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The i + 5-->i hydrogen bonded turn conformation (pi-turn) with the fifth residue adopting alpha L conformation is frequently found at the C-terminus of helices in proteins and hence is speculated to be a "helix termination signal." An analysis of the occurrence of i + 5-->i hydrogen bonded turn conformation at any general position in proteins (not specifically at the helix C-terminus), using coordinates of 228 protein crystal structures determined by X-ray crystallography to better than 2.5 A resolution is reported in this paper. Of 486 detected pi-turn conformations, 367 have the (i + 4)th residue in alpha L conformation, generally occurring at the C-terminus of alpha-helices, consistent with previous observations. However, a significant number (111) of pi-turn conformations occur with (i + 4)th residue in alpha R conformation also, generally occurring in alpha-helices as distortions either at the terminii or at the middle, a novel finding. These two sets of pi-turn conformations are referred to by the names pi alpha L and pi alpha R-turns, respectively, depending upon whether the (i + 4)th residue adopts alpha L or alpha R conformations. Four pi-turns, named pi alpha L'-turns, were noticed to be mirror images of pi alpha L-turns, and four more pi-turns, which have the (i + 4)th residue in beta conformation and denoted as pi beta-turns, occur as a part of hairpin bend connecting twisted beta-strands. Consecutive pi-turns occur, but only with pi alpha R-turns. The preference for amino acid residues is different in pi alpha L and pi alpha R-turns. However, both show a preference for Pro after the C-termini. Hydrophilic residues are preferred at positions i + 1, i + 2, and i + 3 of pi alpha L-turns, whereas positions i and i + 5 prefer hydrophobic residues. Residue i + 4 in pi alpha L-turns is mainly Gly and less often Asn. Although pi alpha R-turns generally occur as distortions in helices, their amino acid preference is different from that of helices. Poor helix formers, such as His, Tyr, and Asn, also were found to be preferred for pi alpha R-turns, whereas good helix former Ala is not preferred. pi-Turns in peptides provide a picture of the pi-turn at atomic resolution. Only nine peptide-based pi-turns are reported so far, and all of them belong to pi alpha L-turn type with an achiral residue in position i + 4. The results are of importance for structure prediction, modeling, and de novo design of proteins.  相似文献   

12.
Capping interactions associated with specific sequences at or near the ends of alpha-helices are important determinants of the stability of protein secondary and tertiary structure. We investigate here the role of the helix-capping motif Ser-X-X-Glu, a sequence that occurs frequently at the N termini of alpha helices in proteins, on the conformation and stability of the GCN4 leucine zipper. The 1.8 A resolution crystal structure of the capped molecule reveals distinct conformations, packing geometries and hydrogen-bonding networks at the amino terminus of the two helices in the leucine zipper dimer. The free energy of helix stabilization associated with the hydrogen-bonding and hydrophobic interactions in this capping structure is -1.2 kcal/mol, evaluated from thermal unfolding experiments. A single cap thus contributes appreciably to stabilizing the terminated helix and thereby the native state. These results suggest that helix capping plays a further role in protein folding, providing a sensitive connector linking alpha-helix formation to the developing tertiary structure of a protein.  相似文献   

13.
R H Yun  A Anderson  J Hermans 《Proteins》1991,10(3):219-228
Free-energy simulations have been used to estimate the change in the conformational stability of short polyalanine alpha-helices when one of the alanines is replaced by a proline residue. For substituting proline in the middle of the helix the change in free energy of folding (delta delta G degrees) was calculated as 14 kJ/mol (3.4 kcal/mol), in excellent agreement with the one available experimental value. The helix containing proline was found to be strongly kinked; the free energy for reducing the angle of the kink from 40 degrees to 15 degrees was calculated, and found to be small. A tendency to alternate hydrogen bonding schemes was observed in the proline-containing helix. These observations for the oligopeptide agree well with the observation of a range of kink angles (18-35 degrees) and variety of hydrogen bonding schemes, in the rare instances where proline occurs in helices in globular proteins. For substituting proline at the N-terminus of the helix the change in free energy of folding (delta delta G degrees) was calculated as -4 kJ/mol in the first helical position (N1) and +6 kJ/mol in the second helical position (N2). The observed frequent occurrence of proline in position N1 in alpha-helices in proteins therefore has its origin in stability differences of secondary structure. The conclusion reached here that proline may be a better helix former in position N1 than (even) alanine, and thus be a helix initiator may be testable experimentally by measurements of fraction helical conformation of individual residues in oligopeptides of appropriate sequence. The relevance of these results in regards to the frequent occurrence of proline-containing helices in certain membrane proteins is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
A systematic survey of seven parallel alpha/beta barrel protein domains, based on exhaustive structural comparisons, reveals that a sizable proportion of the alpha beta loops in these proteins--20 out of a total of 49--belong to either one of two loop types previously described by Thornton and co-workers. Six loops are of the alpha beta 1 type, with one residue between the alpha-helix and beta-strand, and 13 are of the alpha beta 3 type, with three residues between the helix and the strand. Protein fragments embedding the identified loops, and termed alpha beta connections since they contain parts of the flanking helix and strand, have been analyzed in detail revealing that each type of connection has a distinct set of conserved structural features. The orientation of the beta-strand relative to the helix and loop portions is different owing to a very localized difference in backbone conformation. In alpha beta 1 connections, the chain enters the beta-strand via a residue adopting an extended conformation, while in alpha beta 3 it does so via a residue in a near alpha-helical conformation. Other conserved structural features include distinct patterns of side chain orientation relative to the beta-sheet surface and of main chain H-bonds in the loop and the beta-strand moieties. Significant differences also occur in packing interactions of conserved hydrophobic residues situated in the last turn of the helix. Yet the alpha-helix surface of both types of connections adopts similar orientations relative to the barrel sheet surface. Our results suggest furthermore that conserved hydrophobic residues along the sequence of the connections, may be correlated more with specific patterns of interactions made with neighboring helices and sheet strands than with helix/strand packing within the connection itself. A number of intriguing observations are also made on the distribution of the identified alpha beta 1 and alpha beta 3 loops within the alpha/beta-barrel motifs. They often occur adjacent to each other; alpha beta 3 loops invariably involve even numbered beta-strands, while alpha beta 1 loops involve preferentially odd beta-strands; all the analyzed proteins contain at least one alpha beta 3 loop in the first half of the eightfold alpha/beta barrel. Possible origins of all these observations, and their relevance to the stability and folding of parallel alpha/beta barrel motifs are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Alpha t alpha is a de novo designed 38-residue peptide [Fezoui et al. (1995) Protein Sci. 4, 286-295] that adopts a helical hairpin conformation in solution [Fezoui et al. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 91, 3675-3679; Fezoui et al. (1997) Protein Sci. 6, 1869-1877]. Since alpha t alpha was developed as a model system for protein folding at the stage where secondary structures interact and become mutually stabilizing, it is of interest to investigate the increase in stability that occurs with helix association. alpha t alpha was dissected into its component helices and the relative stabilities of the individual helices and the parent molecule were assessed. The Delta G0 of unfolding of alpha t alpha measured by guanidine hydrochloride denaturation was determined to be 3.4 kcal/mol. The equilibrium constant for folding of alpha t alpha was estimated from the Delta G0 as 338 and from hydrogen exchange measurements as 259. The stability of the helices in intact alpha t alpha over the individual helices increased by a factor of at least 37 based on amide proton exchange measurements. Sedimentation equilibrium studies showed very little association of the peptides to form either homo- or heterodimers, suggesting that helix association is stabilized by the high effective concentration of the helices caused by the presence of the connecting turn. The effects of salt and pH on the helicity of the component peptides are largely reflected in the intact molecule, implying that short-range interactions still make important contributions to the conformation of the intact molecule even though significant stabilization is caused by helix association.  相似文献   

16.
Posson DJ  Selvin PR 《Neuron》2008,59(1):98-109
Voltage-driven activation of Kv channels results from conformational changes of four voltage sensor domains (VSDs) that surround the K(+) selective pore domain. How the VSD helices rearrange during gating is an area of active research. Luminescence resonance energy transfer (LRET) is a powerful spectroscopic ruler uniquely suitable for addressing the conformational trajectory of these helices. Using a geometric analysis of numerous LRET measurements, we were able to estimate LRET probe positions relative to existing structural models. The experimental movement of helix S4 does not support a large 15-20 A transmembrane "paddle-type" movement or a near-zero A vertical "transporter-type" model. Rather, our measurements demonstrate a moderate S4 displacement of 10 +/- 5 A, with a vertical component of 5 +/- 2 A. The S3 segment moves 2 +/- 1 A in the opposite direction and is therefore not moving as an S3-S4 rigid body.  相似文献   

17.
The structure of apolipophorin III in the lipid-bound state and the extent of the conformational change that takes place when the five-helix bundle apolipoprotein binds to a lipoprotein lipid surface were investigated by fluorescence resonance energy transfer in discoidal lipoproteins. Four intramolecular interhelical distances between helix pairs 1-4, 2-4, 3-4, and 5-4 were estimated by fluorescence resonance energy transfer in both the lipid-free and the lipid-bound states. Depending on the helices pairs, the intramolecular interhelical distances increased between 15 and > or = 20 A upon binding of the apolipoprotein to lipid, demonstrating for the first time that binding to lipid is accompanied by a major change in interhelical distances. Using discoidal lipoproteins made with a combination of apolipophorin III molecules containing donor and acceptor groups and apolipophorin III molecules containing neither donor nor acceptor groups, it was possible to obtain information about intermolecular interhelical distances between the helix 4 of one apolipoprotein and the helices 1, 2, 3, and 5 of a second apolipoprotein residing in the same discoidal lipoprotein. Altogether, the estimated intermolecular and intramolecular interhelical distances suggest a model in which the apolipoprotein arranges in pairs of antiparallel and fully extended polypeptide chains surrounding the periphery of the bilayer disc.  相似文献   

18.
To understand why different nucleotide sequences prefer different double helical conformations and to predict conformational behaviour of definite sequences the base-base interaction energy in regular helices consisting of A:U, A:T, G:C and I:C (hypoxanthine-cytosine) base pairs was calculated. Interaction energy was assumed to be a function of eight conformational parameters: H, the distance between adjacent pairs along helix axes; tau, turn angle of one pair relative to the neighbouring one; angles between base planes in a pair (TW, propeller twist and BL, buckle) and position of pairs with respect to helix axes (D and SL, displacements in the plane normal to helix axes, and TL and RL, inclinations to this plane, tilt and roll, respectively). For H and tau characteristic of A- and B-families of nucleic acid conformations (2.5 A less than H less than or equal to 3.5 A, 30 degrees less than or equal to tau less than or equal to 45 degrees) the ranges of conformational parameters corresponding to energy values close to minimal ones (valleys) and correlations between conformational parameters were revealed. Valleys for different sequences largely coincide but have distinctive characteristics for each sequence. Reasons for base pair planarity distortion in double-stranded helices were considered. The calculations permit to account for A-phility of G:C sequences and B-phility for A:T sequences. The valley for I:C sequence branches. This corresponds to A:T-like behaviour in some cases and G:C-like in the others.  相似文献   

19.
Deville J  Rey J  Chabbert M 《Proteins》2008,72(1):115-135
Alpha-helices are the most common secondary structures found in globular proteins. In this report, we analyze the stereochemical and sequence properties of helix-X-helix (HXH) motifs in which two alpha-helices are linked by a single residue, in search of characteristic structures and sequence signals. The analysis is carried out on a database of 837 nonredundant HXH motifs. The kinks are characterized by the bend angle between the axes of the N-terminal and C-terminal helices and the wobble angle corresponding to the rotation of C-terminal helix axis on the plane perpendicular to the N-terminal one. The phi-psi dihedral angles of the linker residue are clustered in six distinct areas of the Ramachandran plot: two areas are located in the additional allowed alpha region (alpha(1) and alpha(2)), two areas are in the additional allowed beta region (beta(1) and beta(2)) and two areas have positive phi values (alpha(L) and beta(M)). Each phi/psi region corresponds to characteristic bend and wobble angles and amino acid distributions. Bend angles can vary from 0 degrees to 160 degrees. Most wobble angles correspond to a counter-clockwise rotation of the C-terminal helix. Proline residues are rigorously excluded from the linker position X but have a high propensity at position X+1 of the beta(1) and beta(2) motifs (12 and 7, respectively) and at position X+3 of the alpha(1) motifs (9). Glycine linkers are located either in the alpha(L) region (20%) or in the beta(M) region (80%). This latter conformation is characterized by a marked bend angle (124 degrees +/- 18 degrees) and a clockwise wobble. Among other amino acids, Asn is remarkable for its high propensity (>3) at the linker position of the alpha(2), beta(1), and beta(2) motifs. Stabilization of HXH motifs by H-bonds between polar side chains of the linker and polar groups of the backbone is determined. A method based on position-specific scoring matrices is developed for conformational prediction. The accuracy of the predictions reaches 80% when the method is applied to proline-induced kinks or to kinks with bend angles in the 50 degrees-100 degrees range.  相似文献   

20.
Raman spectroscopy was used to determine the conformation of the disulfide linkage between cysteine residues in the homodimeric construct of the N-terminal alpha helical domain of surfactant protein B (dSP-B(1-25)). The conformation of the disulfide bond between cysteine residues in position 8 of the homodimer of dSP-B(1-25) was compared with that of a truncated homodimer (dSP-B(8-25)) of the peptide having a disulfide linkage at the same position in the alpha helix. Temperature-dependent Raman spectra of the S-S stretching region centered at approximately 500 cm(-1) indicated a stable, although highly strained disulfide conformation with a chi(CS-SC) dihedral angle of +/-10 degrees for the dSP-B(1-25) dimer. In contrast, the truncated dimer dSP-B(8-25) exhibited a series of disulfide conformations with the chi(CS-SC) dihedral angle taking on values of either +/-30 degrees or 85+/-20 degrees . For conformations with chi(CS-SC) close to the +/-90 degrees value, the Raman spectra of the 8-25 truncated dimers exhibited chi(SS-CC) dihedral angles of 90/180 degrees and 20-30 degrees . In the presence of a lipid mixture, both constructs showed a nu(S-S) band at approximately 488 cm(-1), corresponding to a chi(CS-SC) dihedral angle of +/-10 degrees . Polarized infrared spectroscopy was also used to determine the orientation of the helix and beta-sheet portion of both synthetic peptides. These calculations indicated that the helix was oriented primarily in the plane of the surface, at an angle of approximately 60-70 degrees to the surface normal, while the beta structure had approximately 40 degrees tilt. This orientation direction did not change in the presence of a lipid mixture or with temperature. These observations suggest that: (i) the conformational flexibility of the disulfide linkage is dependent on the amino acid residues that flank the cysteine disulfide bond, and (ii) in both constructs, the presence of a lipid matrix locks the disulfide bond into a preferred conformation.  相似文献   

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