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1.
Contribution of proline-14 to the structure and actions of melittin   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The structure and dynamic properties of bee venom melittin and a synthetic analogue, [Ala14]-melittin (melittin P14A), are compared, using high resolution 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and amide exchange measurements in methanol. P14A is shown to adopt a regular, stable alpha-helical conformation in solution without the flexibility around the Pro-14 residue found in melittin. P14A has twice the hemolytic activity of melittin but is less able to induce voltage-dependent ion conductance in planar bilayers. The results indicate that helix flexibility afforded by the Pro-14 residue promotes the ability of melittin to adopt the transbilayer associates thought to underlie ion translocation.  相似文献   

2.
C E Dempsey  G S Butler 《Biochemistry》1992,31(48):11973-11977
A trapping method combined with high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy is described for the measurement of hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates for individual amides of polypeptides bound to fully hydrated, dispersed phospholipid bilayers. Exchange rates were measured for 22 of the 24 amide hydrogens of bee venom melittin bound to bilayers composed of egg phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine (88:12, mol/mol) dispersed in 20 mM sodium acetate, pH 4.0. Amides of residues 5-11 and 16-22 had exchange rates suppressed by between 30- and 1000-fold, and the rate suppression exhibited a helical periodicity with amides on the hydrophobic helix face up to 20-fold more stable than those on the hydrophilic face of the helix. These results demonstrate that under the conditions studied melittin adopts a helical conformation with stable helical hydrogen bonds extending to residue 22 and that the helix is oriented with the hydrophobic face directed toward the membrane interior.  相似文献   

3.
Molecular dynamics simulations of ion channel peptides alamethicin and melittin, solvated in methanol at 27 degrees C, were run with either regular alpha-helical starting structures (alamethicin, 1 ns; melittin 500 ps either with or without chloride counterions), or with the x-ray crystal coordinates of alamethicin as a starting structure (1 ns). The hydrogen bond patterns and stabilities were characterized by analysis of the dynamics trajectories with specified hydrogen bond angle and distance criteria, and were compared with hydrogen bond patterns and stabilities previously determined from high-resolution NMR structural analysis and amide hydrogen exchange measurements in methanol. The two alamethicin simulations rapidly converged to a persistent hydrogen bond pattern with a high level of 3(10) hydrogen bonding involving the amide NH's of residues 3, 4, 9, 15, and 18. The 3(10) hydrogen bonds stabilizing amide NH's of residues C-terminal to P2 and P14 were previously proposed to explain their high amide exchange stabilities. The absence, or low levels of 3(10) hydrogen bonds at the N-terminus or for A15 NH, respectively, in the melittin simulations, is also consistent with interpretations from amide exchange analysis. Perturbation of helical hydrogen bonding in the residues before P14 (Aib10-P14, alamethicin; T11-P14, melittin) was characterized in both peptides by variable hydrogen bond patterns that included pi and gamma hydrogen bonds. The general agreement in hydrogen bond patterns determined in the simulations and from spectroscopic analysis indicates that with suitable conditions (including solvent composition and counterions where required), local hydrogen-bonded secondary structure in helical peptides may be predicted from dynamics simulations from alpha-helical starting structures. Each peptide, particularly alamethicin, underwent some large amplitude structural fluctuations in which several hydrogen bonds were cooperatively broken. The recovery of the persistent hydrogen bonding patterns after these fluctuations demonstrates the stability of intramolecular hydrogen-bonded secondary structure in methanol (consistent with spectroscopic observations), and is promising for simulations on extended timescales to characterize the nature of the backbone fluctuations that underlie amide exchange from isolated helical polypeptides.  相似文献   

4.
Rex S 《Biophysical chemistry》2000,85(2-3):209-228
Melittin, the main component of bee venom of Apis mellifera, contains a proline at position 14, which is highly conserved in related peptides of various bee venoms. To investigate the structural and functional role of Pro14 a melittin analogue was studied where proline is substituted by an alanine residue (P14A). The investigations were focussed on: (i) the secondary structure in aqueous solution and membranes; (ii) the self-association in solution; (iii) the binding to POPC membranes; and (iv) the P14A-induced leakage and pore formation in membrane vesicles. Circular dichroism and gel filtration experiments showed that P14A exists at concentrations < 12 microM in monomeric form with an alpha-helicity of 28 +/- 7%. A further increase in peptide concentration leads to the formation of large aggregates consisting of 9 +/- 1 monomers. While binding studies with POPC vesicles revealed for P14A a stronger binding affinity towards membranes than for melittin, the peptide-induced leakage of fluorescent markers from vesicles was less efficient for P14A than for melittin. Furthermore, an unexpected efflux behaviour at high values of bound P14A was observed which indicated that the pore formation kinetics for P14A is more complex than it was reported for melittin. The different features of P14A in aggregation, binding and efflux compared to melittin are mainly ascribable directly to structural changes caused by the proline --> alanine substitution. Furthermore, the results indicate an improved screening of the positively charged residues of P14A by counterions which contributes additionally to the observed differences in peptide activities. It is suggested that the presence of proline in melittin is not only of structural importance but also influences indirectly the electrostatic properties of the native peptide.  相似文献   

5.
Amide-resolved hydrogen-deuterium exchange-rate constants were measured for backbone amides of alamethicin reconstituted in dioleoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles by an exchange-trapping method combined with high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. In vesicles containing alamethicin at molar ratios between 1:20 and 1:100 relative to lipid, the exchange-rate constants increased with increasing volume of the D20 buffer in which the vesicles were suspended, indicating that exchange under these conditions is dominated by partitioning of the peptide into the aqueous phase. This was supported by observation of a linear relationship between the exchange-rate constants for amides in membrane-reconstituted alamethicin and those for amides in alamethicin dissolved directly into D2O buffer. Significant protection of amides from exchange with D2O buffer in membrane-reconstituted alamethicin is interpreted in terms of stabilization by helical hydrogen bonding. Under conditions in which amide exchange occurred by partitioning of the peptide into solution, only lower limits for hydrogen-bond stabilities in the membrane were determined; all the potentially hydrogen-bonded amides of alamethicin are at least 1000-fold exchange protected in the membrane-bound state. When partitioning of alamethicin into the aqueous phase was suppressed by hydration of reconstituted vesicles in a limiting volume of water [D2O:dioleoylphosphatidylcholine:alamethicin; 220:1:0.05; (M:M:M)], the exchange-protection factors exhibited helical periodicity with highly exchange-protected, and less well-protected, amides on the nonpolar and polar helix faces, respectively. The exchange data indicate that, under the conditions studied, alamethicin adopts a stable helical structure in DOPC bilayers in which all the potentially hydrogen-bonded amides are stabilized by helical hydrogen bonds. The protection factors define the orientation of the peptide helix with respect to an aqueous phase, which is either the bulk solution or water within parallel or antiparallel transmembrane arrays of reconstituted alamethicin.  相似文献   

6.
The collagen triple helix is composed of three polypeptide strands, each with a sequence of repeating (Xaa-Yaa-Gly) triplets. In these triplets, Xaa and Yaa are often tertiary amides: L-proline (Pro) and 4(R)-hydroxy-L-proline (Hyp). To determine the contribution of tertiary amides to triple-helical stability, Pro and Hyp were replaced in synthetic collagen mimics with a non-natural acyclic tertiary amide: N-methyl-L-alanine (meAla). Replacing a Pro or Hyp residue with meAla decreases triple-helical stability. Ramachandran analysis indicates that meAla residues prefer to adopt straight phi and psi angles that are dissimilar from those of the Pro and Hyp residues in the collagen triple helix. Replacement with meAla decreases triple-helical stability more than does replacement with Ala. All of the peptide bonds in triple-helical collagen are in the trans conformation. Although an Ala residue greatly prefers the trans conformation, a meAla residue exists as a nearly equimolar mixture of trans and cis conformers. These findings indicate that the favorable contribution of Pro and Hyp to the conformational stability of collagen triple helices arises from factors other than their being tertiary amides.  相似文献   

7.
Molecular dynamics simulations are described for the peptide melittin. The atomic trajectories are calculated both with normal potential energy functions and with additional distance restraints deduced from nuclear Overhauser effects observed in NMR experiments. The results are compared with NRM data on coupling constants and amide exchange rates and witt B-factors from X-ray crystallography. The observed correlations between experiment and molecular dynamics simulations suggest a relatively mobile C-terminus and relatively high flexibility around residue 11. It is noted that the high conformational variation around residue 11 is due in part to the presence of a proline at position 14 which results in a missing H-bond in the largely -helical structure. It is also noted that a proline is a common feature of many putative membrane spanning helices. A role for such prolines is suggested.  相似文献   

8.
Hydrogen exchange rates were measured or estimated for 75 amide protons in in ferrocytochrome c-551 from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (82 residues total) at neutral pH and 300 K. Rate constants span at least eight orders of magnitude. Rate constants or limiting estimates were determined by a combination of methods relying upon 1H-NMR spectroscopy, including the direct observation in one- or two-dimensional spectra of the decrease in proton intensity for samples dissolved in deuterium oxide, or, in a few favorable cases, saturation transfer from the solvent protic water. The heme ligand residues and the thioether bridge residues were slowly exchanging backbone amides, but the slowest exchanging backbone amides were found in two clusters. One was composed of Ile-48 and Lys-49 in the last turn of what is termed the 40's helix in the protein. The second was composed of Leu-74, Ala-75, Lys-76 and Val-78 in the C-terminal alpha helix.  相似文献   

9.
The spectroscopic and functional characterization of 13C-labeled synthetic melittin and three analogues is described. Selectively 13C-enriched tryptophan ( [13C delta 1]-L-Trp) and glycine ( [13C alpha]Gly) were incorporated into melittin and three analogues by de novo peptide synthesis. 13C-Labeled tryptophan was incorporated into melittin at position 19 and into single-tryptophan analogues of melittin at positions 17, 11, and 9, respectively. Each of the synthetic peptides contained 13C-labeled glycine at position 12 only. The peptides were characterized functionally in a cytolytic assay, and spectroscopically by CD, fluorescence, and NMR. The behavior of 13C-labeled synthetic melittin was, in all respects, indistinguishable from that of the naturally occurring peptide. All of the analogues were found to be efficient lytic agents and thus were functionally similar to the native peptide, yet no evidence was found for formation of a melittin-like tetramer by any of the analogues in aqueous media, although there was a propensity for apparently nonspecific peptide aggregation, especially for MLT-W9. Since the analogues did exhibit fractional helicities by CD comparable to or even greater than melittin itself in the presence of methanol, we infer that tetramer assembly requires not only the ability to form alpha-helix but also a very precise packing of amino acid side chains of the constituent monomers. The 13C chemical shift of the Gly-12 C alpha was found to be a sensitive marker for helix formation in all of the peptides. For melittin itself, 13C NMR spectra revealed a downfield shift of approximately 1.8 ppm for the Gly-12 13C alpha resonance of the tetramer relative to that observed for the free monomer in D2O. In mixed samples containing melittin monomer and tetramer, two discrete Gly-12 13C alpha peaks were observed simultaneously, suggestive of slow exchange between the two species. We conclude that melittin's ability to form a soluble tetramer is not a prerequisite for cytolytic activity, nor is cytolytic potential precisely correlated with the ability to form an amphiphilic helix.  相似文献   

10.
Structure and activity of D-Pro14 melittin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
D-Pro14 melittin was synthesized to investigate the effect of increasing the angle of the bend in the hinge region between the helical segments of the molecule. Structural analysis by nuclear magnetic resonance indicated that, in methanol, the molecule consisted of two helices separated at Pro14, as in melittin. However, the two helices in D-Pro14 melittin were laterally displaced relative to each other by approximately 7 , and in addition, there was a small rotation of the carboxyl-terminal helix relative to the amino-terminal helix around the long axis of the molecule. The peptide had less than 5% of the cytolytic activity of melittin. Modification of Arg22 with the 2,2,5,7,8-pentamethyl-chroman-6-sulphonyl (pmc) group restored hemolytic activity to close to that of unmodified melittin. Replacement of Arg22 with Phe was less effective in restoring hemolytic activity. Electron-paramagnetic resonance studies suggest that there is a positive correlation between hemolytic activity of the peptides and interaction with phospholipid bilayers.Donald E. Rivett: Deceased, 5 April 1998  相似文献   

11.
Summary Amide-resolved, hydrogen-deuterium exchange from bee venom melittin reconstituted in fully hydrated vesicles suspended in D2O buffer was measured using a technique involving (1) trapping samples throughout an exchange time course by rapid freezing and lyophilization; and (2) dissolving the dried peptide/lipid mixtures in deuteromethanol to record high-resolution spectra using semiselective excitation pulses to select peptide amide signals in the presence of large excess lipid signals. Two-dimensional, amide-selective GaussNOESY and fingerprint-selective off-diagonal PingCOSY spectra are shown to be suitable for rapid acquisition of amide-selective spectra, obtained throughout a time course of amide exchange in the membrane-bound state. Membrane-reconstituted melittin is shown to contain two sequences of exchange-stable amides, corresponding to helical regions on either side of the single proline residue.  相似文献   

12.
Alamethicin is a helical 20-amino acid voltage-gated channel-forming peptide, which is known to exhibit segmental flexibility in solution along its backbone near alpha-methylalanine (MeA)-10 and Gly-11. In an alpha-helical configuration, MeA at position 10 would normally hydrogen-bond with position 14, but the presence of proline at this position prevents the formation of this interhelical hydrogen bond. To determine whether the presence of proline at position 14 contributes to the flexibility of this helix, two analogs of alamethicin were synthesized, one with proline 14 replaced by alanine and another with both proline 14 and glycine 11 replaced by alanine. The C-termini of these peptides were derivatized with a proxyl nitroxide, and paramagnetic enhancements produced by the nitroxide on the Calpha protons were used to estimate r-6 weighted distances between the nitroxide and the backbone protons. When compared to native alamethicin, the analog lacking proline 14 exhibited similar C-terminal to Calpha proton distances, indicating that substitution of proline alone does not alter the flexibility of this helix; however, the subsequent removal of glycine 11 resulted in a significant increase in the averaged distances between the C- and N-termini. Thus, the G-X-X-P motif found in alamethicin appears to be largely responsible for mediating high-amplitude bending motions that have been observed in the central helical domain of alamethicin in methanol. To determine whether these substitutions alter the channel behavior of alamethicin, the macroscopic and single-channel currents produced by these analogs were compared. Although the substitution of the G-X-X-P motif produces channels with altered characteristics, this motif is not essential to achieve voltage-dependent gating or alamethicin-like behavior.  相似文献   

13.
The structure of [Ala(31), Pro(32)]-NPY, a neuropeptide Y mutant with selectivity for the NPY Y(5)-receptor (Cabrele, C., Wieland, H. A., Stidsen, C., Beck-Sickinger, A. G., (2002) Biochemistry XX, XXXX-XXXX (companion paper)), has been characterized in the presence of the membrane mimetic dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) micelles using high-resolution NMR techniques. The overall topology closely resembles the fold of the previously described Y(5)-receptor-selective agonist [Ala(31), Aib(32)]-NPY (Cabrele, C., Langer, M., Bader, R., Wieland, H. A., Doods, H. N., Zerbe, O., and Beck-Sickinger, A. G. (2000) J. Biol. Chem 275, 36043-36048). Similar to wild-type neuropeptide Y (NPY) and [Ala(31), Aib(32)]-NPY, the N-terminal residues Tyr(1)-Asp(16) are disordered in solution. Starting from residue Leu(17), an alpha helix extends toward the C-terminus. The decreased density of medium-range NOEs for the C-terminal residues resulting in larger RMSD values for the backbone atoms of Ala(31)-Tyr(36) indicates that the alpha helix has become interrupted through the [Ala(31), Pro(32)] mutation. This finding is further supported by (15)N-relaxation data through which we can demonstrate that the well-defined alpha helix is restricted to residues 17-31, with the C-terminal tetrapeptide displaying increased flexibility as compared to NPY. Surprisingly, increased generalized order parameter as well as decreased (3)J(HN)(alpha) scalar coupling constants reveal that the central helix is stabilized in comparison to wild-type NPY. Micelle-integrating spin labels were used to probe the mode of association of the helix with the membrane mimetic. The Y(5)-receptor-selective mutant and NPY share a similar orientation, which is parallel to the lipid surface. However, signal reductions due to efficient electron, nuclear spin relaxation were much less pronounced for the surface-averted residues in [Ala(31), Pro(32)]-NPY when compared to wild-type DPC-bound NPY. Only the signals of residues Asn(29) and Leu(30) were significantly more reduced in the mutant. The postulation of a different membrane binding mode of [Ala(31), Pro(32)]-NPY is further supported by the faster H/D exchange at the C-terminal amide protons. We conclude that arginine residues 33 and 35, which are believed to be directly involved in forming contacts to acidic receptor residues at the membrane-water interface, are no longer fixed in a well-defined conformation close to the membrane surface in [Ala(31), Pro(32)]-NPY.  相似文献   

14.
Proline residues occur frequently in transmembrane alpha helices, which contrasts with their behaviour as helix-breakers in water-soluble proteins. The three membrane-embedded proline residues of bacteriorhodopsin have been replaced individually by alanine and glycine to give P50A, or P50G on helix B, P91A, or P91G on helix C, and P186A or P186G on helix F, and the effect on the protein folding kinetics has been investigated. The rate-limiting apoprotein folding step, which results in formation of a seven transmembrane, alpha helical state, was slower than wild-type protein for the Pro50 and Pro91 mutants, regardless of whether they were mutated to Ala or Gly. These proline residues give rise to several inter-helix contacts, which are therefore important in folding to the seven transmembrane helix state. No evidence for cis-trans isomerisations of the peptidyl prolyl bonds was found during this rate-limiting apoprotein folding step. Mutations of all three membrane-embedded proline residues affected the subsequent retinal binding and final folding to bacteriorhodopsin, suggesting that these proline residues contribute to formation of the retinal binding pocket within the helix bundle, again via helix/helix interactions. These results point to proline residues in transmembrane alpha helices being important in the folding of integral membrane proteins. The helix/helix interactions and hydrogen bonds that arise from the presence of proline residues in transmembrane alpha helices can affect the formation of transmembrane alpha helix bundles as well as cofactor binding pockets.  相似文献   

15.
A Yee  B Szymczyna  J D O'Neil 《Biochemistry》1999,38(20):6489-6498
Alamethicin is a 20 amino acid antibiotic peptide produced by the soil fungus Trichoderma viride. The peptide inserts into bacterial membranes and self-associates to form ion channels, but the details of this process are unknown. Residue-specific acid- and base-catalyzed exchange data were obtained for 16 of 18 backbone amides of alamethicin dissolved in sodium dodecyl sulfate micelles using high-resolution 2-dimensional heteronuclear nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. To facilitate interpretation of the exchange data, we synthesized N-acetyl-alpha-aminoisobutyric acid-N'-methyl and N-acetyl-alanine-N'-methyl and measured the pD dependence of their hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates to determine the sequence-dependent inductive and steric effects of the alpha-aminoisobutyric acid residue. Intramolecular H-bonding in alamethicin was monitored through the exchange parameters kmin (minimum exchange rate) which indicate that the backbone is significantly more stable than the backbones of alanine-based helical peptides. Rapid exchange at Gly-11 suggests a highly local conformational flexibility in the middle of the peptide. Interactions with the detergent micelle were revealed by the exchange parameters pDmin (pD of minimum exchange) which suggest that the N-terminus of alamethicin interacts more strongly with the detergent micelle than does the C-terminus. A periodicity in pDmin difference data reveals that one surface of the helix interacts more strongly with the micelle. The surface consists of residues 1, 5, 9, 13, 16, and 20. The opposite face of the helix contains several polar residues (two glutamines and a glycine), suggesting that, on average, this face of the helix is directed toward the solvent. These results serve as a model for the interaction of the peptide with membranes containing anionic lipid. In combination with published molecular dynamics simulations [Gibbs et al. (1997) Biophys. J. 72, 2490-2495], the present results also offer insight into the mechanisms of hydrogen-deuterium exchange in helical peptides.  相似文献   

16.
Molecular dynamics simulations of alamethicin in methanol were carried out with either a regular alpha-helical conformation or the x-ray crystal structure as starting structures. The structures rapidly converged to a well-defined hydrogen-bonding pattern with mixed alpha-helical and 3(10)-helical hydrogen bonds, consistent with NMR structural characterization, and did not unfold throughout the 1-ns simulation, despite some sizable backbone fluctuations involving reversible breaking of helical hydrogen bonds. Bending of the helical structure around residues Aib10-Aib13 was associated with reversible flips of the peptide bonds involving G11 (Aib10-G11 or G11-L12 peptide bonds), yielding discrete structural states in which the Aib10 carbonyl or (rarely) the G11 carbonyl was oriented away from the peptide helix. These peptide bond reversals could be accommodated without greatly perturbing the adjacent helical structure, and intramolecular hydrogen bonding was generally maintained in bent states through the formation of new (non-alpha or 3[10]) hydrogen bonds with good geometries: G11 NH-V9 CO (inverse gamma turn), Aib13 NH-Aib8 CO (pi-helix) and, rarely, L12 NH- Q7 NH (pi-helix). These observations may reconcile potentially conflicting NMR structural information for alamethicin in methanol, in which evidence for conformational flexibility in the peptide sequence before P14 (G11-Aib13) contrasts with the stability of backbone amide NH groups to exchange with solvent. Similar reversible reorientation of the Thr11-Gly12 peptide bond of melittin is also observed in dynamics simulations in methanol (R. B. Sessions, N. Gibbs, and C. E. Dempsey, submitted). This phenomenon may have some role in the orientation of the peptide carbonyl in solvating the channel lumen in membrane ion channel states of these peptides.  相似文献   

17.
Shan L  Tong Y  Xie T  Wang M  Wang J 《Biochemistry》2007,46(41):11504-11513
The role of cis-trans isomerizations of peptidyl-proline bonds in the enzyme activity of staphylococcal nuclease (SNase) was examined by mutation of proline residues. The proline-free SNase ([Pro-]SNase), namely, P11A/P31A/P42A/P47T/P56A/P117G-mutant SNase, was adopted for elucidating the correlation between the nuclease activity and the backbone conformational and dynamic states of SNase. The 3D solution structure of [Pro-]SNase has been determined by heteronuclear NMR experiments. Comparing the structure of [Pro-]SNase with the structure of SNase revealed the conformational differences between the two proteins. In the structure of [Pro-]SNase, conformational rearrangements were observed for the loop of residues Ala112-His121 containing a trans Lys116-Gly117 peptide bond and for the C-terminal alpha-helical loop of residues Leu137-Glu142. Mutation of proline at position 117 also caused the conformational rearrangement of the p-loop (Asp77-Leu89), which is remote from the Ala112-His121 loop. The Ala112-His121 loop and p-loop are placed closer to each other in [Pro-]SNase than in SNase. The backbone dynamic features of the omega-loop (Pro42-Pro56) of SNase are different from those of [Pro-]SNase. The backbone of the omega-loop exhibits restricted flexibility with slow conformational exchange motions in SNase, but is highly flexible in [Pro-]SNase. The analysis indicates that the restrained backbone conformation of the Ala112-His121 loop and restricted flexibility of the omega-loop are two dominant factors determining the enzyme activity of SNase. Of the two factors, the former is correlated with the strained cis Lys116-Pro117 peptide bond and the latter is correlated with the cis-trans isomerizations of the His46-Pro47 peptide bond.  相似文献   

18.
pH dependence of hydrogen exchange from backbone peptide amides in apamin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
C E Dempsey 《Biochemistry》1986,25(13):3904-3911
The kinetics of hydrogen exchange of the 11 most protected backbone amides of bee venom apamin have been measured between pH 1 and pH 8.5 by using time-resolved and saturation-transfer NMR spectroscopy. The five amides most protected from base-catalyzed exchange, those of residues 5 and 12-15, show highly correlated exchange behavior in the base-catalyzed regime. It is proposed that the intramolecular hydrogen bonds stabilizing these amides define a stable cooperative unit of secondary structure in apamin (a C-terminal helix and an N-terminal beta-turn). This conformational unit is further stabilized (by 5-6 kJ mol-1) on titration of the Glu-7 side-chain carboxyl group. The relative contributions of specific intramolecular interactions to this conformational stabilization are estimated. The pHminima in the pH-dependent single amide exchange curves are compared with values predicted by correcting for sequence-dependent contributions to amide exchange rates [Molday, R. S., Englander, S. W., & Kallen, R. G. (1972) Biochemistry 11, 150-158]. The lack of correlation suggests that the "open" conformers from which amide exchange occurs are nonrandom. This conclusion is dependent on the assumption that acid-catalyzed exchange occurs via N-protonation so that residual conformational effects on exchange rates in the open conformers will affect acid- and base-catalyzed rates in approximately equal and opposite ways. A strong correlation between the measured pHminima and the amide proton chemical shifts is observed, however, and this may be most easily accommodated if acid-catalyzed exchange occurs by the imidic acid mechanism (via amide O-protonation).  相似文献   

19.
We have examined the contribution to protein stability of an interaction involving a charged hydrogen bond from an arginyl side chain (Arg67) in the serine proteinase inhibitor chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI-2), by replacing this side chain with an alanyl residue by protein engineering. Using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR), we have examined the effect of this mutation on the hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates of several backbone amide protons in the native and engineered proteins at 50 degrees C. These exchange rates provide a localized probe at multiple discrete sites throughout the protein and from comparison of native and mutant exchange rates allow calculation of the difference in free energy of exchange (delta delta Gex) resulting from the mutation. The results show that for the majority of amides observed this mutation results in delta delta Gex of ca. 1.7 kcal mol-1 over the whole CI-2 molecule. However, for two relatively exposed amide protons the exchange rates are found to be far less perturbed, implying that local unfolding mechanisms predominate for these protons. Direct measurement of the stability of both proteins to denaturation by guanidinum hydrochloride shows that the interaction contributes 1.4 kcal mol-1 to the stability of the molecule. This value is comparable to those obtained from the NMR exchange measurements and indicates that the exchange processes reflect the differences in stability between the native and mutant proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Molecular dynamics simulations of bee venom apamin, and an analogue having an Asn to Ala substitution at residue 2 (apamin-N2A), were analyzed to explore the contribution of hydrogen bonds involving Asn2 to local (beta-turn residues N2, C3, K4, A5) and global stability. The wild-type peptide retained a stable conformation during 2.4 ns of simulation at 67 degrees C, with high beta-turn stability characterized by backbone-side chain hydrogen bonds involving beta-turn residues K4 and A5, with the N2 side chain amide carbonyl. The loss of stabilizing interactions involving the N2 side chain resulted in the loss of the beta-turn conformation in the apamin N2A simulations (27 or 67 degrees C). This loss of beta-turn stability propagates throughout the peptide structure, with destabilization of the C-terminal helix connected to the N-terminal region by two disulfide bonds. Backbone stability in a synthetic peptide analogue (apamin-N2A) was characterized by NMR and amide hydrogen exchange measurements. Consistent with the simulations, loss of hydrogen bonds involving the N2 side chain resulted in destabilization of both the N-terminal beta-turn and the C-terminal helix. Amide exchange protection factors in the C-terminal helix were reduced by 9-11-fold in apamin N2A as compared with apamin, corresponding to free energy (deltaDeltaG(uf)) of around 1.5 kcal M(-1) at 20 degrees C. This is equivalent to the contribution of hydrogen bond interactions involving the N2 side chain to the stability of the beta-turn. Together with additional measures of exchange protection factors, the three main contributions to backbone stability in apamin that account for virtually the full thermodynamic stability of the peptide have been quantitated.  相似文献   

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