Abstract

The utility of rotational echo double resonance (REDOR) NMR spectroscopy for determining the conformations of linear peptides has been examined critically using a series of crystalline and amorphous samples. The focus of the present work was the evaluation of long-distance (>5 Å) interactions using 13 C– 15 N dephasing. Detailed studies of specifically labeled melanostatin and synthetic analogs of the α-factor yeast mating hormone show that nitrogen-dephased, carbon-observe REDOR measurements are reliable for distances up to 6.0 Å, and that dipolar interactions can be detected for distances up to 7 Å. By contrast, nitrogen-observe REDOR gives reliable results only for distances shorter than 5.0 Å. To measure distances accurately, REDOR data must be corrected for the effects of natural-abundance spins. These corrections are particularly important for measuring long distances, which are of the greatest value for determining peptide secondary structure. We have developed a spherical shell model for calculating the effect of these background spins. The REDOR studies also indicate that in a lyophilized powder, the tridecapeptide α-factor mating pheromone from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (WHWLQLKPGQPMY) probably exists as a distribution of different turn structures around the KPGQ region. This finding revises previous solid-state NMR studies on this peptide, which concluded α-factor assumes a distorted type-I β-turn in the Pro-Gly central region of the molecule [J.R. Garbow, M. Breslav, O. Antohi, F. Naider, Biochemistry, 33 (1994) 10094].

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call