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Conformational sampling of peptides in cellular environments
Authors:Tanizaki Seiichiro  Clifford Jacob  Connelly Brian D  Feig Michael
Institution:* Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan
Department of Physics, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan
§ Department of Chemistry, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan
Abstract:Biological systems provide a complex environment that can be understood in terms of its dielectric properties. High concentrations of macromolecules and cosolvents effectively reduce the dielectric constant of cellular environments, thereby affecting the conformational sampling of biomolecules. To examine this effect in more detail, the conformational preference of alanine dipeptide, poly-alanine, and melittin in different dielectric environments is studied with computer simulations based on recently developed generalized Born methodology. Results from these simulations suggest that extended conformations are favored over alpha-helical conformations at the dipeptide level at and below dielectric constants of 5-10. Furthermore, lower-dielectric environments begin to significantly stabilize helical structures in poly-alanine at epsilon = 20. In the more complex peptide melittin, different dielectric environments shift the equilibrium between two main conformations: a nearly fully extended helix that is most stable in low dielectrics and a compact, V-shaped conformation consisting of two helices that is preferred in higher dielectric environments. An additional conformation is only found to be significantly populated at intermediate dielectric constants. Good agreement with previous studies of different peptides in specific, less-polar solvent environments, suggest that helix stabilization and shifts in conformational preferences in such environments are primarily due to a reduced dielectric environment rather than specific molecular details. The findings presented here make predictions of how peptide sampling may be altered in dense cellular environments with reduced dielectric response.
Keywords:CHARMM  chemistry at Harvard molecular mechanics (program)  CMAP  correlation map  DNA  deoxyribonucleic acid  DPPC  dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine  GB  generalized Born  GBMV  generalized Born with molecular volume  HFA  hexafluoroacetone hydrate  HFIP  1  1  1  3  3  3  hexafluoro-2-propanol  LMP2/cc-Pvqz  local Mø  ller-Plesset 2/correlation-consistent polarized valence quadruple ζ  MD  molecular dynamics  MMTSB  molecular modeling tools in structural biology  PMF  potential of mean force  PPII  poly-proline II  REX  replica exchange  TFE  2  2  2-trifluoroethanol
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