| Literature DB >> 29267987 |
Fergus S McWhinnie1,2, Kristel Sepp1, Charlotte Wilson1, Tilo Kunath2, Ted R Hupp3, Terry S Baker4, Douglas R Houston5, Alison N Hulme1.
Abstract
Modified peptides, such as stapled peptides, which replicate the structure of α-helical protein segments, represent a potential therapeutic advance. However, the 3D solution structure of these stapled peptides is rarely explored beyond the acquisition of circular dichroism (CD) data to quantify bulk peptide helicity; the detailed backbone structure, which underlies this, is typically undefined. Diastereomeric stapled peptides based on helical sections of three proteins (αSyn, Cks1 and CK1α) were generated; their overall helicity was quantified by CD; and the most helical peptide from each series was selected for structural analysis. Solution-phase models for the optimised peptides were generated using NMR-derived restraints and a modified CHARMM22 force field. Comparing these models with PDB structures allowed deviation between the stapled peptides and critical helical regions to be evaluated. These studies demonstrate that CD alone is not sufficient to assess the structural fidelity of a stapled peptide.Entities:
Keywords: NMR spectroscopy; peptides; ring-closing metathesis; stapled peptides; structure elucidation
Year: 2018 PMID: 29267987 DOI: 10.1002/chem.201705983
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236