Abstract: | The solution conformation of the antibiotic peptide alamethicin was investigated using multi-nuclear spectroscopy and the distance geometry/simulated annealing algorithms from the program DSPACE. 1H-, 13C-, and 15N-nmr chemical shifts and homonuclear 1H coupling constants suggest that the molecule is flexible in the vicinity of Gly-11 and Leu-12. The temperature dependence of the amide proton chemical shifts indicates that there is flexibility in the middle of the 20 residue peptide and provides evidence that, at the very N-terminus, the molecule adopts a 310-helical conformation. The large differences in the 13C chemical shifts of the pro-R and pro-S methyls of the α-aminoisobutyric acid residues were used to constrain those residues to the right-handed helical conformation in the distance geometry/simulated annealing algorithms. A family of 24 structures was generated but did not converge to a common conformation when superimposed over the entire polypeptide sequence. The molecules did converge to a helical conformation over residues 1–10 and residues 13–18. The lack of convergence when the entire lengths of the molecules are superimposed is explained by the flexibility of the peptide near Gly-11/Leu-12. The results suggest that the protein consists of two helices connected by a flexible “hinge.” The flexibility of the molecule is discussed with respect to the macrodipole model of voltage gating. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. |