R. Roy, I. Karle, S. Raghothama
Nov 23, 2004
Citations
0
Influential Citations
44
Citations
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Abstract
Conformational studies on the synthetic 11-aa peptide t-butoxycarbonyl (Boc)-Val-Ala-Phe-alpha-aminoisobutyric acid (Aib)-(R)-beta3-homovaline (betaVal)-(S)-beta3-homophenylalanine (betaPhe)-Aib-Val-Ala-Phe-Aib-methyl ester (OMe) (peptide 1; betaVal and betaPhe are beta amino acids generated by homologation of the corresponding l-residues) establish that insertion of two consecutive beta residues into a polypeptide helix can be accomplished without significant structural distortion. Crystal-structure analysis reveals a continuous helical conformation encompassing the segment of residues 2-10 of peptide 1. At the site of insertion of the betabeta segment, helical hydrogen-bonded rings are expanded. A C15 hydrogen bond for the alphabetabeta segment and two C14 hydrogen bonds for the alphaalphabeta or betaalphaalpha segments have been characterized. The following conformational angles were determined from the crystal structure for the beta residues: betaVal-5 (= -126 degrees, = 76 degrees, and psi = -124) and betaPhe-6 (=-88 degrees, = 80 degrees, and psi =-118). The N terminus of the peptide is partially unfolded in crystals. The 500-MHz 1H-NMR studies establish a continuous helix over the entire length of the peptide in CDCl3 solution, as evidenced by diagnostic nuclear Overhauser effects. The presence of seven intramolecular hydrogen bonds is also established by using solvent dependence of NH chemical shifts.