Abstract

Chirality is an omnipresent feature in nature's architecture starting from simple molecules like amino acids to complex higher-order structures viz. proteins, DNA, and RNA. The L configuration of proteinogenic amino acids gives rise to right-handed helices. Ambidexterity is as rare in organisms as in molecules. There are only a few reports of ambidexterity in single-peptide molecules composed of either mixed L and D or achiral residues. Here, we report, for the first time, the ambidextrous and left-handed helical conformations in the chiral nonapeptides P1-P3 (Boc-LUVUγx,xULUV-OMe where U = Aib, x,x = 2,2/3,3/4,4), containing chiral L α amino acid residues, in addition to the usually observed right-handed helical conformation. The centrally located achiral γ residue, capable of adopting both left and right-handed helical conformations, induces its handedness on the neighboring chiral and achiral residues, leading to the observation of both left and right-handed helices in P2 and P3. The presence of a single water molecule proximal to the γ residue induces the reversal of helix handedness by forming distinct and stable water-mediated hydrogen bonds. This gives rise to ambidextrous helices as major conformers in P1 and P2. The absence of the observation of ambidexterity in P3 might be due to the inability of γ4,4 in the recruitment of a water molecule. Experiments (NMR, X-ray, and CD) and density functional theory (DFT) calculations suggest that the position of geminal disubstitution is crucial for determining the population of the amenable helical conformations (ambidextrous, left and right-handed) in these chiral peptides.

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