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Acyl capping groups stabilize -helices relative to free N-termini by providing one additional C=Oi•••Hi+4–N hydrogen bond. The electronic properties of acyl capping groups might also directly modulate -helix stability: electron-rich N-terminal acyl groups could stabilize the -helix by strengthening both i/i+4 hydrogen bonds and i/i+1 n* interactions. This hypothesis was tested in peptides X–AKAAAKAAAKAAAAKAAGY-NH2, X=different acyl groups. Surprisingly, the most electron-rich acyl groups (pivaloyl, iso-butyryl) strongly destabilized the -helix. Moreover, the formyl group induced nearly identical -helicity as the acetyl group, despite being a weaker electron donor for hydrogen bonds and for n* interactions. Other acyl groups exhibited intermediate -helicity. These results indicate that the electronic properties of the acyl carbonyl do not directly determine -helicity in peptides in water. In order to understand these effects, DFT calculations were conducted on -helical peptides. Using implicit solvation, -helix stability correlated with acyl group electronics, with the pivaloyl group exhibiting closer hydrogen bonds and n* interactions, in contrast to the experimental results. However, DFT and MD calculations with explicit water solvation revealed that hydrogen bonding to water was impacted by the sterics of the acyl capping group. Formyl capping groups exhibited the closest water-amide hydrogen bonds, while pivaloyl groups exhibited the longest. In -helices in the PDB, the highest frequency of close amide-water hydrogen bonds is observed when the N-cap residue is Gly. The combination of experimental and computational results indicates that solvation (hydrogen bonding of water) to the N-terminal amide groups is a central determinant of -helix stability.more » « less
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Despite the importance of proline conformational equilibria (trans versus cis amide, exo versus endo ring pucker) on protein structure and function, there is a lack of convenient ways to probe proline conformation. 4,4-Difluoroproline (Dfp) was identified to be a sensitive 19F NMR-based probe of proline conformational biases and of cis-trans isomerism. Within model compounds and disordered peptides, the diastereotopic fluorines of Dfp exhibit similar chemical shifts (FF = 0–3 ppm) when a trans X–Dfp amide bond is present. In contrast, the diastereotopic fluorines exhibit a large (FF = 5–12 ppm) difference in chemical shift in a cis X–Dfp prolyl amide bond. DFT calculations, X-ray crystallography, and solid-state NMR spectroscopy indicated that the FF directly reports on the relative preference of one proline ring pucker over the other: a fluorine which is pseudo-axial (i.e. the pro-4R-F in an exo ring pucker, or the pro-4S-F in an endo ring pucker) is downfield, while a fluorine which is pseudo-equatorial (i.e. pro-4S-F when exo, or pro-4R-F when endo) is upfield. Thus, when a proline is disordered (a mixture of exo and endo ring puckers, as at trans-Pro in peptides in water), it exhibits a small . In contrast, when the Pro is ordered (i.e. when one ring pucker is strongly preferred, as in cis-Pro amide bonds, where the endo ring pucker is strongly favored), a large is observed. Dfp can be used to identify inherent induced order in peptides and to quantify proline cis-trans isomerism. Using Dfp, we discovered that the stable polyproline II helix (PPII) formed in the denatured state (8 M urea) exhibits essentially equal populations of the exo and endo proline ring puckers. In addition, the data with Dfp suggested the specific stabilization of PPII by water over other polar solvents. These data strongly support the importance of carbonyl solvation and n* interactions for the stabilization of PPII. Dfp was also employed to quantify proline cis-trans isomerism as a function of phosphorylation and the R406W mutation in peptides derived from the intrinsically disordered protein tau. Dfp is minimally sterically disruptive and can be incorporated in expressed proteins, suggesting its broad application in understanding proline cis-trans isomerization, protein folding, and local order in intrinsically disordered proteins.more » « less
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Cysteine sulfonic acid (Cys-SO3H; cysteic acid) is an oxidative post-translational modification of cysteine, resulting from further oxidation from cysteine sulfinic acid (Cys- SO2H). Cysteine sulfonic acid is considered an irreversible post-translational modification, which serves as a biomarker of oxidative stress that has resulted in oxidative damage to proteins. Cysteine sulfonic acid is anionic, as a sulfonate (Cys-SO –; cysteate), in the ionization state that 3 is almost exclusively present at physiological pH (pKa ~ –2). In order to understand protein structural changes that can occur upon oxidation to cysteine sulfonic acid, we analyzed its conformational preferences, using experimental methods, bioinformatics, and DFT-based computational analysis. Cysteine sulfonic acid was incorporated into model peptides for α-helix and polyproline II helix (PPII). Within peptides, oxidation of cysteine to the sulfonic acid proceeds rapidly and efficiently at room temperature in solution with methyltrioxorhenium (MeReO3) and H2O2. Peptides containing cysteine sulfonic acid were also generated on solid phase using trityl-protected cysteine and oxidation with MeReO3 and H2O2. Using methoxybenzyl (Mob)-protected cysteine, solid-phase oxidation with MeReO3 and H2O2 generated the Mob sulfone precursor to Cys-SO – within fully synthesized peptides. These two solid-phase methods allow the synthesis of peptides containing either Cys-SO – or Cys-SO – in a 32 practical manner, with no solution-phase synthesis required. Cys-SO – had low PPII propensity 3 for PPII propagation, despite promoting a relatively compact conformation in φ. In contrast, in a PPII initiation model system, Cys-SO – promoted PPII relative to neutral Cys, with PPII initiation similar to Cys thiolate but less than Cys-SO – or Ala. In an α-helix model system, Cys- 2 SO – promoted α-helix near the N-terminus, due to favorable helix dipole interactions and 3 favorable α-helix capping via a sulfonate-amide side chain-main chain hydrogen bond. Across all peptides, the sulfonate side chain was significantly less ordered than that of the sulfinate. Analysis of Cys-SO – in the PDB revealed a very strong propensity for local (i/i or i/i+1) side 3 chain-main chain sulfonate-amide hydrogen bonds for Cys-SO –, with > 80% of Cys-SO – 33 residues exhibiting these interactions. DFT calculations conducted to explore these conformational preferences indicated that side chain-main chain hydrogen bonds of the sulfonate with the intraresidue amide and/or with the i+1 amide were favorable. However, hydrogen bonds to water or to amides, as well as interactions with oxophilic metals, were weaker for the sulfonate than the sulfinate, due to lower charge density on the oxygens in the sulfonate.more » « less
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