Protein Engineering, Vol. 15, No. 4, 331-335,
April 2002
© 2002 Oxford University Press
Dehydrophenylalanine zippers: strong helixhelix clamping through a network of weak interactions
1 Department of Physics and 2 Bioinformatics Center, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore-560012, 3 Department of NMR, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi-110029 and 4 International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, Aruna Asaf Ali Marg, New Delhi-110067, India
A decapeptide Boc-L-Ala-(
Phe)4-L-Ala-(
Phe)3-Gly-OMe (Peptide I) was synthesized to study the preferred screw sense of consecutive
,ß-dehydrophenylalanine (
Phe) residues. Crystallographic and CD studies suggest that, despite the presence of two L-Ala residues in the sequence, the decapeptide does not have a preferred screw sense. The peptide crystallizes with two conformers per asymmetric unit, one of them a slightly distorted right-handed 310-helix (X) and the other a left-handed 310-helix (Y) with X and Y being antiparallel to each other. An unanticipated and interesting observation is that in the solid state, the two shape-complement molecules self-assemble and interact with an extensive network of CH···O hydrogen bonds and
interactions, directed laterally to the helix axis with amazing regularity. Here, we present an atomic resolution picture of the weak interaction mediated mutual recognition of two secondary structural elements and its possible implication in understanding the specific folding of the hydrophobic core of globular proteins and exploitation in future work on de novo design.