Abstract

We examined the 204-nm UV resonance Raman (UVR) spectra of the polyproline II (PPII) and alpha-helical states of a 21-residue mainly alanine peptide (AP) in different H2O/D2O mixtures. Our hypothesis is that if the amide backbone vibrations are coupled, then partial deuteration of the amide N will perturb the amide frequencies and Raman cross sections since the coupling will be interrupted; the spectra of the partially deuterated derivatives will not simply be the sum of the fully protonated and deuterated peptides. We find that the UVR spectra of the AmIII and AmII' bands of both the PPII conformation and the alpha-helical conformation (and also the PPII AmI, AmI', and AmII bands) can be exactly modeled as the linear sum of the fully N-H protonated and N-D deuterated peptides. Negligible coupling occurs for these vibrations between adjacent peptide bonds. Thus, we conclude that these peptide bond Raman bands can be considered as being independently Raman scattered by the individual peptide bonds. This dramatically simplifies the use of these vibrational bands in IR and Raman studies of peptide and protein structure. In contrast, the AmI and AmI' bands of the alpha-helical conformation cannot be well modeled as a linear sum of the fully N-H protonated and N-D deuterated derivatives. These bands show evidence of coupling between adjacent peptide bond vibrations. Care must be taken in utilizing the AmI and AmI' bands for monitoring alpha-helical conformations since these bands are likely to change as the alpha-helical length changes and the backbone conformation is perturbed.

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