Abstract

To assess the relative importance of backbone hydrogen bonding (H-bonding) vs. side chain hydrophobicity in protein structural formation, a method called side chain-backbone swap is proposed. Such a method swaps the side chain and backbone portions of certain amino acid residues, such as Asp, Glu, Asn, Gln, Lys, and Arg. Such a swap retains the sequence of a polypeptide and preserves the identity of the backbone linkage. On the other hand, the swap disrupts backbone H-bonding geometry because of the introduction of extra methylene groups into the peptide backbone. In this project, we chose the two-stranded alpha-helical coiled-coil to implement side chain-backbone swap. A pair of 36-residue peptides was designed. The two peptides have identical sequence with four residues in each heptad repeat occupied by glutamyl residues. Each glutamic acid was incorporated either as alpha-glutamyl residue (the peptide is denoted as alpha-Glu-36) or as gamma-glutamyl residue (the peptide is denoted as gamma-Glu-36). The inter-conversion between the two peptides constitutes a side chain-backbone swap. Residues constituting the hydrophobic core of the coiled-coil, however, are left unchanged. The peptide pair was characterized by circular dichroism spectroscopy, reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC), and two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). The results indicate that alpha-Glu-36 is a two-stranded alpha-helical coiled-coil while gamma-Glu-36 lacks stable structural elements. It is concluded that, at least for coiled-coils where hydrophobic interactions are predominantly long-range, local backbone H-bonding is a required for structural formation, consistent with a hierarchic folding mechanism. The methodological implication of side chain-backbone swap is also discussed.

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