Abstract

Nisin is a posttranslationally modified protein of 34 amino acids, and is a member of the class of bacteriocidal polypeptides known as lantibiotics, that contain the unusual amino acid lanthionine. Its structure in aqueous solution has been determined on the basis of NMR data, i.e. interproton distance constraints derived from nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy and torsion angle constraints derived from double-quantum-filtered correlated spectroscopy. Translation of the NMR constraints into a three-dimensional structure was carried out with the distance-geometry program DISMAN, followed by restrained energy minimization using CHARMm. The internal mobility of the peptide chain prohibited the determination of a precise overall folding of the molecule, but parts of the structure could be obtained, albeit sometimes with low resolution. The structure of nisin can best be defined as follows. The outermost N-terminal and C-terminal regions of nisin appear quite flexible, the remainder of the molecule consists of an amphiphilic N-terminal fragment (residues 3-19), joined by a flexible 'hinge' region to a rigid double-ring fragment formed by residues 23-28. The latter fragment has the appearance of a somewhat overwound alpha-helix. It is suggested, by assuming the presence of a (transient) alpha-helical structure in this part of prenisin, that the coupling between residues 23 and 26, as well as between 25 and 28, by thioether bridges, and the inversion of the C alpha chiralities at positions 23 and 25, can be rationalized.

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