4.5 Article

Refining Disordered Peptide Ensembles with Computational Amide I Spectroscopy: Application to Elastin-Like Peptides

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 120, Issue 44, Pages 11395-11404

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.6b08678

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [CHE-1414486]
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [1 R01 GM118774-01, 5 R01 GM109455-02]

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The characterization of intrinsically disordered protein (IDP) ensembles is complicated both by inherent heterogeneity and by the fact that many common experimental techniques function poorly when applied to IDPs. For this reason, the development of alternative structural tools for probing IDP ensembles has attracted considerable attention. Here we describe our recent work in developing experimental, and computational tools for characterizing IDP ensembles using Amide I (backbone carbonyl stretch) vibrational spectroscopy. In this approach, the infrared (IR) absorption frequencies of isotope-labeled amide bonds probe their local electrostatic environments and structures. Empirical frequency maps allow us to use this spectroscopic data as a direct experimental test of atomistic structural models. We apply these methods to a family of short elastin-like peptides (ELPs), fragments of the elastin protein based around the Pro-Gly turn motif characteristic of the elastomeric segments of the full protein. Using a maximum entropy analysis that applies constraints from experimental spectra to weighting predicted spectra from-molecular dynamics (MD) ensembles, we find that peptides with Ala or Val side chains preceding the Pro-Gly turn unit exhibit a stronger tendency toward extended structures than do Gly-Pro-Gly motifs, suggesting an important role for steric interactions in tuning the molecular properties of elastin.

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