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Relationship of sidechain hydrophobicity and α‐helical propensity on the stability of the single‐stranded amphipathic α‐helix

369

Citations

33

References

1995

Year

Abstract

The aim of the present investigation is to determine the effect of alpha-helical propensity and sidechain hydrophobicity on the stability of amphipathic alpha-helices. Accordingly, a series of 18-residue amphipathic alpha-helical peptides has been synthesized as a model system where all 20 amino acid residues were substituted on the hydrophobic face of the amphipathic alpha-helix. In these experiments, all three parameters (sidechain hydrophobicity, alpha-helical propensity and helix stability) were measured on the same set of peptide analogues. For these peptide analogues that differ by only one amino acid residue, there was a 0.96 kcal/mole difference in alpha-helical propensity between the most (Ala) and the least (Gly) alpha-helical analogue, a 12.1-minute difference between the most (Phe) and the least (Asp) retentive analogue on the reversed-phase column, and a 32.3 degrees C difference in melting temperatures between the most (Leu) and the least (Asp) stable analogue. The results show that the hydrophobicity and alpha-helical propensity of an amino acid sidechain are not correlated with each other, but each contributes to the stability of the amphipathic alpha-helix. More importantly, the combined effects of alpha-helical propensity and sidechain hydrophobicity at a ratio of about 2:1 had optimal correlation with alpha-helix stability. These results suggest that both alpha-helical propensity and sidechain hydrophobicity should be taken into consideration in the design of alpha-helical proteins with the desired stability.

References

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