Abstract

Peptaibols are a special class of fungal peptides with an acetylated N-terminus and a C-terminal 1,2-amino alcohol along with non-standard amino acid residues. New peptaibols named tripleurins were recently identified from a strain of the filamentous fungal species Trichoderma pleuroti, which is known to cause green mould disease on cultivated oyster mushrooms. To understand the mode of action of these peptaibols, the three-dimensional structure of tripleurin (TPN) XIIc, an 18-mer peptide, was elucidated using an enhanced sampling method, accelerated MD, in water and chloroform solvents. Non-standard residues were parameterized by the Restrained Electrostatic Potential (RESP) charge fitting method. The dihedral distribution indicated towards a right-handed helical formation for TPN XIIc in both solvents. Dihedral angle based principal component analysis revealed a propensity for a slightly bent, helical folded conformation in water solvent, while two distinct conformations were revealed in chloroform: One that folds into highly bent helical structure that resembles a beta-hairpin and another with an almost straight peptide backbone appearing as a rare energy barrier crossing event. The hinge-like movement of the terminals was also observed and is speculated to be functionally relevant. The convergence and efficient sampling is addressed using Cartesian PCA and Kullback-Leibler divergence methods.

Highlights

  • Small bioactive peptides like peptaibols have piqued the interests of microbiologists owing to their antibacterial, antifungal, anti-viral, anti-helminth, and anti-tumor properties [1,2,3,4,5], as well as their abilities to elicit plant defense responses [6,7]

  • Non-standard amino acid residues like aminoisobutyric acid (Aib), D-isovaline (Div), hydroxy-proline (Hyp), and C-terminal alcohol residues like phenylalaninol (Pheol), valinol, etc., along with an acetylated N-terminal (Ac) are characteristic for these peptides ranging seven–20 amino acid residues in length

  • We focused on the folding dynamics of a recently discovered 18-mer peptaibol, Tripleurin (TPN)

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Summary

Introduction

Small bioactive peptides like peptaibols have piqued the interests of microbiologists owing to their antibacterial, antifungal, anti-viral, anti-helminth, and anti-tumor properties [1,2,3,4,5], as well as their abilities to elicit plant defense responses [6,7]. Non-standard amino acid residues like aminoisobutyric acid (Aib), D-isovaline (Div), hydroxy-proline (Hyp), and C-terminal alcohol residues like phenylalaninol (Pheol), valinol, etc., along with an acetylated N-terminal (Ac) are characteristic for these peptides ranging seven–20 amino acid residues in length They are synthesized by large modular enzymes called non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs), where a single module contains multiple catalytic domains responsible. The difference in tilt angles for the termini indicates towards a central kink and bends in the alamethicin structure Such observation has been made for all trans-membrane proteins by Hall et al [18], who showed that 44% of trans-membrane helices contained a significant kink, proline being the cause 35% of the times. It can be speculated that the occurrence of this bend must have a crucial functional role either during membrane disruption or in the ion-channel formation

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