• Title of article

    β-hairpin-forming peptides; models of early stages of protein folding Review Article

  • Author/Authors

    Agnieszka Lewandowska، نويسنده , , Stanis?aw O?dziej، نويسنده , , Adam Liwo، نويسنده , , Steven E. Ealick and Harold A. Scheraga، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    1
  • To page
    9
  • Abstract
    Formation of β-hairpins is considered the initial step of folding of many proteins and, consequently, peptides constituting the β-hairpin sequence of proteins (the β-hairpin-forming peptides) are considered as models of early stages of protein folding. In this article, we discuss the results of experimental studies (circular-dichroism, infrared and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and differential scanning calorimetry) of the structure of β-hairpin-forming peptides excised from the B1 domain of protein G, which are known to fold on their own. We demonstrate that local interactions at the turn sequence and hydrophobic interactions between nonpolar residues are the dominant structure-determining factors, while there is no convincing evidence that stable backbone hydrogen bonds are formed in these peptides in aqueous solution. Consequently, the most plausible mechanism for folding of the β-hairpin sequence appears to be the broken-zipper mechanism consisting of the following three steps: (i) bending the chain at the turn sequence owing to favorable local interactions, (ii) formation of loose hydrophobic contacts between nonpolar residues, which occur close to the contacts in the native structure of the protein but not exactly in the same position and, finally, (iii) formation of backbone hydrogen bonds and locking the hydrophobic contacts in the native positions as a hydrophobic core develops, sufficient to dehydrate the backbone peptide groups. This mechanism provides sufficient uniqueness (contacts form between residues that become close together because the chain is bent at the turn position) and robustness (contacts need not occur at once in the native positions) for folding a β-hairpin sequence.
  • Keywords
    protein folding , CD spectroscopy , NMR spectroscopy , IR spectroscopy , Differential scanning calorimetry , ?-hairpin-forming peptides
  • Journal title
    Biophysical Chemistry
  • Serial Year
    2010
  • Journal title
    Biophysical Chemistry
  • Record number

    1120358