Publication Date:
2010
abstract:
The analysis of the folding mechanism in peptides adopting well-defined
secondary structure is fundamental to understand protein folding.
Herein, we describe the thermal unfolding of a 1.5-mer vascular
endothelial growth factor mimicking a-helical peptide (QK(L10A)) through
the combination of spectroscopic and computational analyses. In
particular, on the basis of the temperature dependencies of QK(L10A)
H(alpha) chemical shifts we show that the first phase of the thermal
helix unfolding, ending at around 320 K, involves mainly the terminal
regions. A second phase of the transition, ending at around 333 K,
comprises the central helical region of the peptide. The determination
of high-resolution QK(L10A) conformational preferences in water at 313 K
allowed us to identify, at atomic resolution, one intermediate of the
folding unfolding pathway. Molecular dynamics simulations corroborate
experimental observations detecting a stable central helical turn, which
represents the most probable site for the helix nucleation in the
folding direction. The data presented herein allows us to draw a folding
unfolding picture for the small peptide QK(L10A) compatible with the
nucleation-propagation model. This study, besides contributing to the
basic field of peptide helix folding, is useful to gain an insight into
the design of stable helical peptides, which could find applications as
molecular scaffolds to target protein-protein interactions.
Iris type:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Diana, Donatella; Ziaco, Barbara; Scarabelli, Guido; Pedone, Carlo; Colombo, Giorgio; D'Andrea Luca, D; Fattorusso, Roberto
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