» Articles » PMID: 11369854

Energy Landscape of a Peptide Consisting of Alpha-helix, 3(10)-helix, Beta-turn, Beta-hairpin, and Other Disordered Conformations

Overview
Journal Protein Sci
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 2001 May 23
PMID 11369854
Citations 23
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The energy landscape of a peptide [Ace-Lys-Gln-Cys-Arg-Glu-Arg-Ala-Nme] in explicit water was studied with a multicanonical molecular dynamics simulation, and the AMBER parm96 force field was used for the energy calculation. The peptide was taken from the recognition helix of the DNA-binding protein, c-MYB: A rugged energy landscape was obtained, in which the random-coil conformations were dominant at room temperature. The CD spectra of the synthesized peptide revealed that it is in the random state at room temperature. However, the 300 K canonical ensemble, Q(300K), contained alpha-helix, 3(10)-helix, beta-turn, and beta-hairpin structures with small but notable probabilities of existence. The complete alpha-helix, imperfect alpha-helix, and random-coil conformations were separated from one another in the conformational space. This means that the peptide must overcome energy barriers to form the alpha-helix. The overcoming process may correspond to the hydrogen-bond rearrangements from peptide-water to peptide-peptide interactions. The beta-turn, imperfect 3(10)-helix, and beta-hairpin structures, among which there are no energy barriers at 300 K, were embedded in the ensemble of the random-coil conformations. Two types of beta-hairpin with different beta-turn regions were observed in Q(300K). The two beta-hairpin structures may have different mechanisms for the beta-hairpin formation. The current study proposes a scheme that the random state of this peptide consists of both ordered and disordered conformations. In contrast, the energy landscape obtained from the parm94 force field was funnel like, in which the peptide formed the helical conformation at room temperature and random coil at high temperature.

Citing Articles

Membrane Permeability in a Large Macrocyclic Peptide Driven by a Saddle-Shaped Conformation.

Faris J, Adaligil E, Popovych N, Ono S, Takahashi M, Nguyen H J Am Chem Soc. 2024; 146(7):4582-4591.

PMID: 38330910 PMC: 10885153. DOI: 10.1021/jacs.3c10949.


A New Approach for Estimating the Free Energy Differences among Multiple Thermodynamic States in Statistical Simulations.

Yang J, Singer S J Phys Chem Lett. 2023; 14(22):5127-5133.

PMID: 37249593 PMC: 10493164. DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.3c00620.


Molecular Mechanisms of Functional Modulation of Transcriptional Coactivator PC4 via Phosphorylation on Its Intrinsically Disordered Region.

Xie Q, Kasahara K, Higo J, Takahashi T ACS Omega. 2023; 8(16):14572-14582.

PMID: 37125110 PMC: 10134458. DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.3c00364.


Molecular Dynamics Ensemble Refinement of Intrinsically Disordered Peptides According to Deconvoluted Spectra from Circular Dichroism.

Ezerski J, Zhang P, Jennings N, Waxham M, Cheung M Biophys J. 2020; 118(7):1665-1678.

PMID: 32145192 PMC: 7136346. DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2020.02.015.


Exploration of the Misfolding Mechanism of Transthyretin Monomer: Insights from Hybrid-Resolution Simulations and Markov State Model Analysis.

Zhou S, Cheng J, Yang T, Ma M, Zhang W, Yuan S Biomolecules. 2019; 9(12).

PMID: 31861226 PMC: 6995605. DOI: 10.3390/biom9120889.


References
1.
Kamatari Y, Ohji S, Konno T, Seki Y, Soda K, Kataoka M . The compact and expanded denatured conformations of apomyoglobin in the methanol-water solvent. Protein Sci. 1999; 8(4):873-82. PMC: 2144319. DOI: 10.1110/ps.8.4.873. View

2.
Ogata K, Morikawa S, Nakamura H, Hojo H, Yoshimura S, Zhang R . Comparison of the free and DNA-complexed forms of the DNA-binding domain from c-Myb. Nat Struct Biol. 1995; 2(4):309-20. DOI: 10.1038/nsb0495-309. View

3.
Kidera A . Enhanced conformational sampling in Monte Carlo simulations of proteins: application to a constrained peptide. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1995; 92(21):9886-9. PMC: 40907. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.92.21.9886. View

4.
Honda S, Kobayashi N, Munekata E . Thermodynamics of a beta-hairpin structure: evidence for cooperative formation of folding nucleus. J Mol Biol. 2000; 295(2):269-78. DOI: 10.1006/jmbi.1999.3346. View

5.
Blanco F, Serrano L, Forman-Kay J . High populations of non-native structures in the denatured state are compatible with the formation of the native folded state. J Mol Biol. 1998; 284(4):1153-64. DOI: 10.1006/jmbi.1998.2229. View