» Articles » PMID: 1445892

FTIR Spectroscopic Studies of the Conformation and Amide Hydrogen Exchange of a Peptide Model of the Hydrophobic Transmembrane Alpha-helices of Membrane Proteins

Overview
Journal Biochemistry
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 1992 Nov 24
PMID 1445892
Citations 26
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The conformation and amide hydrogen exchangeability of the hydrophobic peptide Lys2-Gly-Leu24-Lys2-Ala-amide were studied by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. In these studies information on the secondary structure of the peptide was obtained from an examination of the contours of both the amide I and amide II absorption bands. The conformationally sensitive amide I and amide II regions of the infrared spectra suggest that the peptide is predominantly alpha-helical and that it contains some non-alpha-helical structures which are probably in an extended conformation. Studies of the exchangeability of the amide protons of the peptide indicate that there are two populations of amide protons which differ markedly with respect to their exchangeability with the bulk solvent phase, whether the peptide is dissolved in methanol or dispersed in hydrated lipid bilayers. One population of amide protons is very readily exchangeable, and our data suggest that it arises primarily but not exclusively from the extended regions of the peptide. The other population exchanges very slowly with the bulk solvent and appears to originate entirely from the alpha-helical domain of the peptide. This latter population is virtually unexchangeable when the peptide is dispersed in hydrated phosphatidylcholine bilayers but can be largely exchanged when the peptide is solubilized with methanol. We suggest that this slowly exchanging population of amide protons arises from the central part of the hydrophobic polyleucine core which forms a very stable alpha-helix that would be deeply buried in the hydrophobic domain of hydrated lipid bilayers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Citing Articles

A conserved H-bond network in human aquaporin-1 is necessary for native folding and oligomerization.

Drewniak P, Xiao P, Ladizhansky V, Bondar A, Brown L Biophys J. 2024; 123(24):4285-4303.

PMID: 39425471 PMC: 11700357. DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2024.10.011.


Quantitative Analysis of Multiplex H-Bonds.

Brielle E, Arkin I J Am Chem Soc. 2020; 142(33):14150-14157.

PMID: 32692171 PMC: 7588041. DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c04357.


Spider-silk inspired polymeric networks by harnessing the mechanical potential of β-sheets through network guided assembly.

Chan N, Gu D, Tan S, Fu Q, Pattison T, OConnor A Nat Commun. 2020; 11(1):1630.

PMID: 32242004 PMC: 7118121. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-15312-x.


Amide-Functionalized Chalcogen-Bridged Flexible Tetranuclear Rhenacycles: Synthesis, Characterization, Solvent Effect on the Structure, and Guest Binding.

Karthikeyan M, Ramakrishna B, Vellaiyadevan S, Divya D, Manimaran B ACS Omega. 2019; 3(3):3257-3266.

PMID: 31458582 PMC: 6641653. DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.7b02075.


Broad-Bandwidth Chiral Sum Frequency Generation Spectroscopy for Probing the Kinetics of Proteins at Interfaces.

Wang Z, Fu L, Ma G, Yan E Langmuir. 2015; 31(42):11384-98.

PMID: 26196215 PMC: 4625692. DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.5b02100.