3c3h
From Proteopedia
alpha/beta-Peptide helix bundles: A GCN4-pLI analogue with an (alpha-alpha-beta) backbone and cyclic beta residues
Structural highlights
Publication Abstract from PubMedThe extent to which polypeptide conformation depends on side-chain composition and sequence has been widely studied, but less is known about the importance of maintaining an alpha-amino acid backbone. Here, we examine a series of peptides with backbones that feature different repeating patterns of alpha- and beta-amino acid residues but an invariant side-chain sequence. In the pure alpha-backbone, this sequence corresponds to the previously studied peptide GCN4-pLI, which forms a very stable four-helix bundle quaternary structure. Physical characterization in solution and crystallographic structure determination show that a variety of alpha/beta-peptide backbones can adopt sequence-encoded quaternary structures similar to that of the alpha prototype. There is a loss in helix bundle stability upon beta-residue incorporation; however, stability of the quaternary structure is not a simple function of beta-residue content. We find that cyclically constrained beta-amino acid residues can stabilize the folds of alpha/beta-peptide GCN4-pLI analogues and restore quaternary structure formation to backbones that are predominantly unfolded in the absence of cyclic residues. Our results show a surprising degree of plasticity in terms of the backbone compositions that can manifest the structural information encoded in a sequence of amino acid side chains. These findings offer a framework for the design of nonnatural oligomers that mimic the structural and functional properties of proteins. Interplay among side chain sequence, backbone composition, and residue rigidification in polypeptide folding and assembly.,Horne WS, Price JL, Gellman SH Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Jul 8;105(27):9151-6. Epub 2008 Jun 27. PMID:18587049[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
|