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Title: Factors governing 3(10)-helix vs alpha-helix formation in peptides: percentage of C(alpha)-tetrasubstituted alpha-amino acid residues and sequence dependence. Author: Crisma M, Bisson W, Formaggio F, Broxterman QB, Toniolo C. Journal: Biopolymers; 2002 Aug 15; 64(5):236-45. PubMed ID: 12115131. Abstract: As an additional step toward the dissection of the factors responsible for the onset of 3(10)-helix vs alpha-helix in peptides, in this paper we describe the results of a three-dimensional (3D) structural analysis by x-ray diffraction of the N(alpha)-acylated heptapeptide alkylamide mBrBz-L-Iva-L-(alphaMe)Val-L-Abu-L-(alphaMe)Val-L-(alphaMe)Phe-L-(alphaMe)Val-L-Iva-NHMe characterized by a single (L-Abu3) C(alpha)-trisubstituted and six C(alpha)-tetrasubstituted alpha-amino acids. We find that in the crystal state this peptide is folded in a mixed helical structure with short elements of 3(10)-helix at either terminus and a central region of alpha-helix. This finding, taken together with the published NMR and x-ray diffraction data on the all C(alpha)-methylated parent sequence and its L-Val2 analog (also the latter heptapeptide has a single C(alpha)-trisubstituted alpha-amino acid) strongly supports the view that one C(alpha)-trisubstituted alpha-amino acid inserted near the N-terminus of an N(alpha)-acylated heptapeptide alkylamide sequence may be enough to switch a regular 3(10)-helix into an essentially alpha-helical conformation. As a corollary of this work, the x-ray diffraction structure of the N(alpha)-protected, C-terminal tetrapeptide alkylamide Z-L-(alphaMe)Val-L-(alphaMe)Phe-L-(alphaMe)Val-L-Iva-NHMe, also reported here, is clearly indicative of the preference of this fully C(alpha)-methylated, short peptide for the 3(10)-helix. As the same terminally blocked sequence is mixed 3(10)/alpha-helical in the L-Abu3 heptapeptide amide but regular 3(10)-helical in the tetrapeptide amide and in the parent heptapeptide amide, these results point to an evident plasticity even of a fully C(alpha)-methylated short peptide.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]