Cylindrical β-sheet peptide assemblies

被引:179
|
作者
Clark, TD
Buriak, JM
Kobayashi, K
Isler, MP
McRee, DE
Ghadiri, MR
机构
[1] Scripps Res Inst, Dept Chem, La Jolla, CA 92037 USA
[2] Scripps Res Inst, Dept Mol Biol, La Jolla, CA 92037 USA
[3] Scripps Res Inst, Skaggs Inst Chem Biol, La Jolla, CA 92037 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1021/ja981485i
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
Recent reports have shown that cyclic peptides composed of an even number of alternating D- and L-amino acids can adopt flat, disklike conformations and stack through backbone-backbone hydrogen-bonding to form extended nanotubular structures. The present work details a general strategy for limiting this self-assembly process through backbone alkylation, giving rise to cylindrical beta-sheet peptide dimers. Scope and limitations of dimerization are examined through NMR, FT-IR, mass spectral, and X-ray crystallographic studies of 20 cyclic peptides varying in ring size, location and identity of backbone alkyl substituents, and amino acid composition. The cyclic peptides are shown to self-assemble both in solution and in the solid state through the expected antiparallel beta-sheet hydrogen-bonding network. While solution dimerization by cyclic octapeptides appears general, peptides with alternative smaller or larger ring sizes fail to self-associate. Formation of cylindrical beta-sheet ensembles is found to tolerate a number of backbone N-alkyl substituents, including methyl, allyl, n-propyl, and pent-4-en-1-yl groups, as well as a range of amino acid side chains. Within the hemi-N-methylated octapeptide framework, residues exhibit differential propensities for dimer stabilization, analogous to amino acid beta-sheet propensities in natural systems. Dimer-forming cyclic D,L-peptides are thus among the most structurally well characterized and synthetically accessible beta-sheet peptide model systems.
引用
收藏
页码:8949 / 8962
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Covalent capture and stabilization of cylindrical β-sheet peptide assemblies
    Clark, TD
    Kobayashi, K
    Ghadiri, MR
    CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL, 1999, 5 (02) : 782 - 792
  • [2] Engineering β-sheet peptide assemblies for biomedical applications
    Yu, Zhiqiang
    Cai, Zheng
    Chen, Qiling
    Liu, Menghua
    Ye, Ling
    Ren, Jiaoyan
    Liao, Wenzhen
    Liu, Shuwen
    BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE, 2016, 4 (03) : 365 - 374
  • [3] New cylindrical peptide assemblies defined by extended parallel β-sheets
    Pehere, Ashok D.
    Sumby, Christopher J.
    Abell, Andrew D.
    ORGANIC & BIOMOLECULAR CHEMISTRY, 2013, 11 (03) : 425 - 429
  • [4] An infrared spectroscopy approach to follow β-sheet formation in peptide amyloid assemblies
    Seo, Jongcheol
    Hoffmann, Waldemar
    Warnke, Stephan
    Huang, Xing
    Gewinner, Sandy
    Schoellkopf, Wieland
    Bowers, Michael T.
    von Helden, Gert
    Pagel, Kevin
    NATURE CHEMISTRY, 2017, 9 (01) : 39 - 44
  • [5] An infrared spectroscopy approach to follow β-sheet formation in peptide amyloid assemblies
    Seo J.
    Hoffmann W.
    Warnke S.
    Huang X.
    Gewinner S.
    Schöllkopf W.
    Bowers M.T.
    Von Helden G.
    Pagel K.
    Nature Chemistry, 2017, 9 (1) : 39 - 44
  • [6] Structural Consequences of Introducing Bioactive Domains to Designer β-Sheet Peptide Self-Assemblies
    Robang, Alicia S.
    Roy, Abhishek
    Dodd-o, Joseph B.
    He, Dongjing
    Le, Justin V.
    Mcshan, Andrew C.
    Hu, Yuhang
    Kumar, Vivek A.
    Paravastu, Anant K.
    BIOMACROMOLECULES, 2024, 25 (03) : 1429 - 1438
  • [7] Parallel β-sheet assemblies at interfaces
    Sneer, R
    Weygand, MJ
    Kjaer, K
    Tirrell, DA
    Rapaport, H
    CHEMPHYSCHEM, 2004, 5 (05) : 747 - 750
  • [8] Roller forming for cylindrical assemblies
    Sprovieri, John
    Sprovieri, John, 1600, Assembly Headquarters (63):
  • [9] Catalytic peptide assemblies
    Zozulia, O.
    Dolan, M. A.
    Korendovych, I. V.
    CHEMICAL SOCIETY REVIEWS, 2018, 47 (10) : 3621 - 3639
  • [10] Designable peptide assemblies
    Conticello, Vincent
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2017, 253