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β‐Hairpin folding and stability: molecular dynamics simulations of designed peptides in aqueous solution
Author(s) -
Santiveri Clara M.,
Jiménez M. Ángeles,
Rico Manuel,
van Gunsteren Wilfred F.,
Daura Xavier
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
journal of peptide science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.475
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1099-1387
pISSN - 1075-2617
DOI - 10.1002/psc.564
Subject(s) - molecular dynamics , chemistry , folding (dsp implementation) , conformational isomerism , hydrogen bond , peptide , crystallography , aqueous solution , loop (graph theory) , turn (biochemistry) , protein folding , side chain , stereochemistry , chemical physics , molecule , computational chemistry , organic chemistry , biochemistry , mathematics , combinatorics , electrical engineering , engineering , polymer
The structural properties of a 10‐residue and a 15‐residue peptide in aqueous solution were investigated by molecular dynamics simulation. The two designed peptides, SYINSDGTWT and SESYINSDGTWTVTE, had been studied previously by NMR at 278 K and the resulting model structures were classified as 3:5 β‐hairpins with a type I + G1 β‐bulge turn. In simulations at 278 K, starting from the NMR model structure, the 3:5 β‐hairpin conformers proved to be stable over the time period evaluated (30 ns). Starting from an extended conformation, simulations of the decapeptide at 278 K, 323 K and 353 K were also performed to study folding. Over the relatively short time scales explored (30 ns at 278 K and 323 K, 56 ns at 353 K), folding to the 3:5 β‐hairpin could only be observed at 353 K. At this temperature, the collapse to β‐hairpin‐like conformations is very fast. The conformational space accessible to the peptide is entirely dominated by loop structures with different degrees of β‐hairpin character. The transitions between different types of ordered loops and β‐hairpins occur through two unstructured loop conformations stabilized by a single side‐chain interaction between Tyr2 and Trp9, which facilitates the changes of the hydrogen‐bond register. In agreement with previous experimental results, β‐hairpin formation is initially driven by the bending propensity of the turn segment. Nevertheless, the fine organization of the turn region appears to be a late event in the folding process. Copyright © 2004 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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