Abstract

The hydration effect on the folding behavior of oligopeptides is of vital importance both in the structure basis of biomolecules and in the rational design of peptide-based materials, which however has rarely been addressed. Here we present the hydration impact on the spontaneous folding of dipeptides conjugated by the ferrocene spacer. In organic phase, the ferrocene-glycine-phenylalanine dipeptide formed a parallel β-sheet structure and Herrick's conformation, which underwent conformational transformation encountering aqueous media, by significantly switching dipeptide arm angles around the ferrocene axis up to 72°. The conformational transformation behavior aroused inversion of the chiroptical activity. Solid X-ray structures, proton nuclear magnetic resonance, chiroptical spectroscopy, and the density functional theory calculation were employed to unveil the hydration effect in the secondary structure transition, in which the rearrangement of hydrogen bonds played the vital role. This work deepens the understanding of water functioning in the structure modulation of biomolecules and also provides an alternative protocol in designing novel chiroptical switches and adaptive peptide-based biomaterials.

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