Abstract

A theoretical solvation model of peptides and proteins that mimics the heterogeneous membrane-water system was proposed. Our approach is based on the combined use of atomic parameters of solvation for water and hydrocarbons, which approximates the hydrated polar groups and acyl chains of lipids, respectively. This model was tested in simulations of several peptides: a nonpolar 20-mer polyleucine, a hydrophobic peptide with terminal polar groups, and a strongly amphiphilic peptide. The conformational space of the peptides in the presence of the membrane was studied by the Monte Carlo method. Unlike a polar solvent and vacuum, the membrane-like environment was shown to stabilize the alpha-helical conformation: low-energy structures have a helicity index of 100% in all cases. At the same time, the energetically most favorable orientations of the peptides relative to the membrane depend on their hydrophobic properties: nonpolar polyleucine is entirely immersed in the bilayer and the hydrophobic peptide with polar groups at the termini adopts a transbilayer orientation, whereas the amphiphilic peptide lies at the interface parallel to the membrane plane. The results of the simulations agree well with the available experimental data for these systems. In the following communications of this series, we plan to describe applications of the solvation model to membrane-bound proteins and peptides with biologically important functional activities.

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