Role of hydrophobic interactions and desolvation in determining the structural properties of a model alpha beta peptide.
- 6 February 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 93 (3), 1135-1140
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.93.3.1135
Abstract
Model AB, a 20-amino acid peptide that was designed to adopt an alpha beta tertiary structure stabilized by hydrophobic interactions between residues in adjacent helical and extended segments, exhibited large pKa shifts of several ionizable groups and slow hydrogen/deuterium exchange rates of nearly all the peptide amide groups [Butcher, D. J., Bruch, M. D. & Moe, G. T. (1995) Biopolymers 36, 109-120]. These properties, which depend on structure and hydration, are commonly observed in larger proteins but are quite unusual for small peptides. To identify which of several possible features of the peptide design are most important in determining these properties, several closely related analogs of Model AB were characterized by CD and NMR spectroscopy. The results show that hydrophobic interactions between adjacent helical and extended segments are structure-determining and have the additional effect of altering water-peptide interactions over much of the peptide surface. These results may have important implications for understanding mechanisms of protein folding and for the design of independently folding peptides.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Histidine residues at the N- and C-termini of .alpha.-helixes: perturbed pKas and protein stabilityBiochemistry, 1992
- The chemical shift index: a fast and simple method for the assignment of protein secondary structure through NMR spectroscopyBiochemistry, 1992
- Defining Solution Conformations of Small Linear PeptidesAnnual Review of Biophysics, 1991
- Probing the stability of a partly folded apomyoglobin intermediate by site-directed mutagenesisBiochemistry, 1991
- Dominant forces in protein foldingBiochemistry, 1990
- INTERMEDIATES IN THE FOLDING REACTIONS OF SMALL PROTEINSAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 1990
- Capping and α-helix stabilityNature, 1989
- A peptide model of a protein folding intermediateNature, 1988
- Amino Acid Preferences for Specific Locations at the Ends of α HelicesScience, 1988
- Tests of the helix dipole model for stabilization of α-helicesNature, 1987