| Literature DB >> 17193192 |
John H Missimer1, Michel O Steinmetz, Wolfgang Jahnke, Fritz K Winkler, Wilfred F van Gunsteren, Xavier Daura.
Abstract
We report the investigation of two 16-residue peptides in aqueous solution by means of molecular-dynamics simulations. The peptides constitute the C- and N-terminal halves of the 33-residue monomer whose dimer constitutes the leucine zipper of the yeast transcriptional activator, denoted GCN4-p1. To examine a hypothesis about coiled-coil formation, in which the C-terminal half contains a helix-formation trigger site absent in the N-terminal half, experimental studies of the two peptides have determined their helix propensities under several conditions of temperature, pH, and salt concentration with circular dichroism. An NMR experiment provides additional evidence. At temperatures of 278 and 325 K and pH 7.5, mixtures of alpha- and pi-helical secondary structure constitute the most probable conformations in both C- and N-terminal halves. A bifurcated salt bridge between Arg25 and Glu22/20 correlates with the structural fluctuations of the C-terminal half. It also exhibits a persistent loop at the N-terminal end involving the side chains of His18 and Glu22, which is reminiscent of helix-capping boxes. Nonreversible unfolding appears to occur abruptly in the Arg25 mutant, suggesting a cooperative event. Analysis does not indicate that the N-terminal half is less stable than the C-terminal half, indicating that 100 ns is too short a period to observe complete unfolding.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 17193192 DOI: 10.1002/cbdv.200590078
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Biodivers ISSN: 1612-1872 Impact factor: 2.408