Nature versus design: the conformational propensities of D-amino acids and the importance of side chain chirality
Publication date
27/11/2014Peer-Reviewed
YesOpen Access status
closedAccessAccepted for publication
11/08/2014
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D-amino acids are useful building blocks for de novo peptide design and they play a role in aging-related diseases associated with gradual protein racemization. For amino acids with achiral side chains, one should be able to presume that the conformational propensities of L- and D-amino acids are a reflection of one another due to the straightforward geometric inversion at the Cα atom. However, this presumption does not account for the directionality of the backbone dipole and the inverted propensities have never been definitively confirmed in this context. Furthermore, there is little known of how alternative side chain chirality affects the backbone conformations of isoleucine and threonine. Using a GGXGG host-guest pentapeptide system, we have completed exhaustive sampling of the conformational propensities of the D-amino acids, including D-allo-isoleucine and D-allo-threonine, using atomistic molecular dynamics simulations. Comparison of these simulations with the same systems hosting the cognate L-amino acids verifies that the intrinsic backbone conformational propensities of the D-amino acids are the inverse of their cognate L-enantiomers. Where amino acids have a chiral center in their side chain (Thr, Ile) the β-configuration affects the backbone sampling, which in turn can confer different biological properties.Version
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Towse C, Hopping G, Vulovic IM et al (2014) Nature versus design: the conformational propensities of D-amino acids and the importance of side chain chirality. Protein Engineering Design and Selection. 27(11): 447-455.Link to Version of Record
https://doi.org/10.1093/protein/gzu037Type
Articleae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
https://doi.org/10.1093/protein/gzu037