Abstract

The effect of an aqueous/organic interface on the folding and aggregation of amphipathic peptides is examined by applying discontinuous molecular dynamics (DMD) simulations combined with an intermediate resolution protein model, PRIME20, to a peptide/interface system. The systems contain 48 (KLLK)4 peptides in random coil or α-helical conformations interacting with both strong and weak interfaces. In the absence of an interface, most of the oligomers form helical bundles, a small fraction of which convert to β-sheets when the temperature is above the folding transition. Adding a weak interface decreases oligomer formation above the folding temperature and increases it below. Little monolayer formation is observed at the weak interface; instead reversible adsorption increases the local peptide concentration near the interface, promoting helical bundle formation in the aqueous phase below the folding temperature and β-sheet formation above the folding temperature. Introducing a strong interface leads to irreversible adsorption, promoting formation of helical monolayers below the folding temperature and mixed β-sheet/amorphous monolayers above the folding temperature. The (KLLK)4 peptide is more likely to adsorb to the interface when it is in an α-helical conformation, as opposed to a random coil, because of its larger hydrophobic moment.

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