Title of article :
The Solvation Interface is a Determining Factor in Peptide Conformational Preferences
Author/Authors :
Eric J. Sorin، نويسنده , , Young Min Rhee، نويسنده , , Michael R. Shirts، نويسنده , , Vijay S. Pande، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
9
From page :
248
To page :
256
Abstract :
The 21 residue polyalanine-based Fs peptide was studied using thousands of long, explicit solvent, atomistic molecular dynamics simulations that reached equilibrium at the ensemble level. Peptide conformational preference as a function of hydrophobicity was examined using a spectrum of explicit solvent models, and the peptide length-dependence of the hydrophilic and hydrophobic components of solvent-accessible surface area for several ideal conformational types was considered. Our results demonstrate how the character of the solvation interface induces several conformational preferences, including a decrease in mean helical content with increased hydrophilicity, which occurs predominantly through reduced nucleation tendency and, to a lesser extent, destabilization of helical propagation. Interestingly, an opposing effect occurs through increased propensity for 310-helix conformations, as well as increased polyproline structure. Our observations provide a framework for understanding previous reports of conformational preferences in polyalanine-based peptides including (i) terminal 310-helix prominence, (ii) low π-helix propensity, (iii) increased polyproline conformations in short and unfolded peptides, and (iv) membrane helix stability in the presence and absence of water. These observations provide physical insight into the role of water in peptide conformational equilibria at the atomic level, and expand our view of the complexity of even the most “simple” of biopolymers. Whereas previous studies have focused predominantly on hydrophobic effects with respect to tertiary structure, this work highlights the need for consideration of such effects at the secondary structural level.
Keywords :
Protein folding , distributed computing , explicit solvent , Molecular dynamics , Hydrophobicity
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number :
1246547
Link To Document :
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