Tobias D J, Brooks C L
Department of Chemistry, Carnegie mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213.
Biochemistry. 1991 Jun 18;30(24):6059-70. doi: 10.1021/bi00238a033.
We used molecular dynamics simulations to study the folding/unfolding of one of turn of an alpha helix in Ac-(Ala)3-NHMe and Ac-(Val)3-NHMe. Using specialized sampling techniques, we computed free energy surfaces as functions of a conformational coordinate that corresponds to alpha helices at small values and to extended conformations at large values. Analysis of the peptide conformations populated during the simulations showed that alpha helices, reverse turns, and extended conformations correspond to minima on the free energy surfaces of both peptides. The free energy difference between alpha helix and extended conformations, determined from the equilibrium constants for helix unfolding, is approximately -1 kcal/mol for Ac-(Ala)3-NHMe and -5 kcal/mol for Ac-(Val)3-NHMe. The mechanism observed in our simulations, which includes reverse turns as important intermediates along the helix folding/unfolding pathway, is consistent with a mechanism proposed previously. Our results predict that both peptides (but especially the Ala peptide) have a much larger equilibrium constant for helix initiation than is predicted by the helix-coil transition theory with the host-guest parameters. We also predict a much greater difference in the equilibrium constants than the theory predicts. Insofar as helix initiation is concerned, our results suggest that the large difference between the helical propensities of Ala and Val cannot be explained by simple concepts such as side-chain rotamer restriction or unfavorable steric interactions. Rather, the origin of the difference appears to be quite complicated because it involves subtle differences in the solvation of the two peptides. The two peptides have similar turn-extended equilibria but very different helix-turn equilibria, and the difference in helical propensities reflects the fact that the helix-turn equilibrium strongly favors the turns in Ac-(Val)3-NHMe, while it favors the helices in Ac-(Ala)3-NHMe. We also computed thermodynamic decompositions of the free energy surfaces, and these revealed that the helix-turn equilibria are vastly different primarily because the changes in peptide-water interactions that accompany helix-to-turn conformational changes are qualitatively different for the two peptides.
我们使用分子动力学模拟研究了Ac-(Ala)3-NHMe和Ac-(Val)3-NHMe中α螺旋一圈的折叠/去折叠过程。通过使用专门的采样技术,我们计算了自由能面,其作为一个构象坐标的函数,该构象坐标在小值时对应α螺旋,在大值时对应伸展构象。对模拟过程中出现的肽构象的分析表明,α螺旋、反向转角和伸展构象对应于两种肽的自由能面上的最小值。根据螺旋去折叠的平衡常数确定的α螺旋与伸展构象之间的自由能差,对于Ac-(Ala)3-NHMe约为-1千卡/摩尔,对于Ac-(Val)3-NHMe约为-5千卡/摩尔。我们在模拟中观察到的机制,包括反向转角作为螺旋折叠/去折叠途径中的重要中间体,与先前提出的机制一致。我们的结果预测,两种肽(尤其是丙氨酸肽)的螺旋起始平衡常数比基于主客体参数的螺旋-卷曲转变理论预测的要大得多。我们还预测平衡常数之间的差异比该理论预测的要大得多。就螺旋起始而言,我们的结果表明,丙氨酸和缬氨酸的螺旋倾向之间的巨大差异不能用诸如侧链旋转异构体限制或不利的空间相互作用等简单概念来解释。相反,差异的起源似乎相当复杂,因为它涉及两种肽在溶剂化方面的细微差异。这两种肽具有相似的转角-伸展平衡,但螺旋-转角平衡非常不同,螺旋倾向的差异反映了这样一个事实,即螺旋-转角平衡强烈有利于Ac-(Val)3-NHMe中的转角,而有利于Ac-(Ala)3-NHMe中的螺旋。我们还计算了自由能面的热力学分解,结果表明螺旋-转角平衡有很大差异,主要是因为两种肽从螺旋到转角构象变化时伴随的肽-水相互作用的变化在性质上不同。