Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Preferred peptide backbone conformations in the unfolded state revealed by the structure analysis of alanine-based (AXA) tripeptides in aqueous solution

Preferred peptide backbone conformations in the unfolded state revealed by the structure analysis... We have combined Fourier transform IR, polarized Raman spectroscopy, and vibrational CD measurements of the amide I′ band profile of alanyl-X-alanine tripeptides in 2H2O to obtain the dihedral angles of their central amino acid residue. X represents glycine, valine, methionine, histidine, serine, proline, lysine, leucine, tryptophan, tyrosine, and phenylalanine. The experimental data were analyzed by means of a recently developed algorithm, which exploits the excitonic coupling between the amide modes of the two peptide groups. The results were checked by measuring the respective electronic CD spectra. The investigated peptides can be sorted into three classes. Valine, phenylalanine, tryptophan, histidine, and serine predominantly adopt an extended β-strand conformation. Cationic lysine and proline prefer a polyproline II-like structure. Alanine, methionine, glycine, and leucine populate these two conformations with comparable probability. Our results are in variance with the prediction of the random-coil model, but supportive of Flory's isolated-pair hypothesis. We combined the obtained structural propensities of the investigated residues and similar information about other residues in the literature (i.e., glutamate, aspartate, isoleucine, and glutamine) to predict possible conformations of the monomeric amyloid β peptide Aβ1–42 in aqueous solution, which reproduces results from most recent spectroscopic studies. Thus, it is demonstrated that the unfolded state of peptides can be understood in terms of the intrinsic structural propensities of their amino acid residues. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences PNAS

Preferred peptide backbone conformations in the unfolded state revealed by the structure analysis of alanine-based (AXA) tripeptides in aqueous solution

Preferred peptide backbone conformations in the unfolded state revealed by the structure analysis of alanine-based (AXA) tripeptides in aqueous solution

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , Volume 101 (27): 10054 – Jul 6, 2004

Abstract

We have combined Fourier transform IR, polarized Raman spectroscopy, and vibrational CD measurements of the amide I′ band profile of alanyl-X-alanine tripeptides in 2H2O to obtain the dihedral angles of their central amino acid residue. X represents glycine, valine, methionine, histidine, serine, proline, lysine, leucine, tryptophan, tyrosine, and phenylalanine. The experimental data were analyzed by means of a recently developed algorithm, which exploits the excitonic coupling between the amide modes of the two peptide groups. The results were checked by measuring the respective electronic CD spectra. The investigated peptides can be sorted into three classes. Valine, phenylalanine, tryptophan, histidine, and serine predominantly adopt an extended β-strand conformation. Cationic lysine and proline prefer a polyproline II-like structure. Alanine, methionine, glycine, and leucine populate these two conformations with comparable probability. Our results are in variance with the prediction of the random-coil model, but supportive of Flory's isolated-pair hypothesis. We combined the obtained structural propensities of the investigated residues and similar information about other residues in the literature (i.e., glutamate, aspartate, isoleucine, and glutamine) to predict possible conformations of the monomeric amyloid β peptide Aβ1–42 in aqueous solution, which reproduces results from most recent spectroscopic studies. Thus, it is demonstrated that the unfolded state of peptides can be understood in terms of the intrinsic structural propensities of their amino acid residues.

Loading next page...
 
/lp/pnas/preferred-peptide-backbone-conformations-in-the-unfolded-state-yvyIGZvXCS

References

References for this paper are not available at this time. We will be adding them shortly, thank you for your patience.

Publisher
PNAS
Copyright
Copyright ©2009 by the National Academy of Sciences
ISSN
0027-8424
eISSN
1091-6490
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

We have combined Fourier transform IR, polarized Raman spectroscopy, and vibrational CD measurements of the amide I′ band profile of alanyl-X-alanine tripeptides in 2H2O to obtain the dihedral angles of their central amino acid residue. X represents glycine, valine, methionine, histidine, serine, proline, lysine, leucine, tryptophan, tyrosine, and phenylalanine. The experimental data were analyzed by means of a recently developed algorithm, which exploits the excitonic coupling between the amide modes of the two peptide groups. The results were checked by measuring the respective electronic CD spectra. The investigated peptides can be sorted into three classes. Valine, phenylalanine, tryptophan, histidine, and serine predominantly adopt an extended β-strand conformation. Cationic lysine and proline prefer a polyproline II-like structure. Alanine, methionine, glycine, and leucine populate these two conformations with comparable probability. Our results are in variance with the prediction of the random-coil model, but supportive of Flory's isolated-pair hypothesis. We combined the obtained structural propensities of the investigated residues and similar information about other residues in the literature (i.e., glutamate, aspartate, isoleucine, and glutamine) to predict possible conformations of the monomeric amyloid β peptide Aβ1–42 in aqueous solution, which reproduces results from most recent spectroscopic studies. Thus, it is demonstrated that the unfolded state of peptides can be understood in terms of the intrinsic structural propensities of their amino acid residues.

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of SciencesPNAS

Published: Jul 6, 2004

There are no references for this article.