scholarly journals The primary structure of alamethicin

1970 ◽  
Vol 117 (4) ◽  
pp. 757-766 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. W. Payne ◽  
R. Jakes ◽  
B. S. Hartley

Alamethicin, an antibiotic that can transport cations and induce action potentials in synthetic membranes, is shown to be a cyclic peptide with 18 residues including 7-α-aminoisobutyric acid residues, two glutamine residues and one free carboxyl group. The composition indicates microheterogeneity. Alamethicin itself and many peptides derived from it are immune to enzymic digestion, but specific partial acid cleavages have allowed determination of the complete sequence. Diborane reduction has shown that the α-carboxyl group of glutamine-18 is free, but the ring is formed by a peptide bond between the imino group of proline-1 and the γ-carboxyl group of glutamic acid-17. The structure is contrasted with that of other cation-transporting antibiotics. Model building allows a structure that could stack to form a tunnel with a lipophilic exterior and hydrophilic interior and flexible internal arms formed by the pendant C-terminal glutamine residue.

1975 ◽  
Vol 145 (2) ◽  
pp. 251-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Casey ◽  
A Lang

1. A new approach to the analysis, by “fingerprinting”, of the tryptic core region of human haemoglobin alpha-chain is described. 2. The alpha-chain is cyanylated at its single cysteine residue (alpha104) and then split, by exposure to mild alkali, at the N-peptide bond of the resulting beta-thiocyanoalanine residue. 3. The two cleavage fragments, alpha1-103 and alpha104-141, are separated by gel filtration, and the fragment alpha104-141, which contains all the residues of the alpha-chain tryptic core, is digested with pepsin. 4. Preparative “fingerprints” of these peptic peptides yield eight major peptides, which provide complete sequence information for the whole region alpha104-141. 5. The utility of the method is demonstrated by repeating the determination of the substitution in haemoglobin Hopkins-2, a known alpha-chain core variant in which histidine-alpha112 (G19) is replaced by an aspartic acid residue.


1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (11) ◽  
pp. 2733-2750 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saul Wolfe ◽  
Kiyull Yang ◽  
Maged Khalil

Using the MMPEN parameters of Allinger's MMP2(85) force field, a conformational analysis has been performed on four biologically active penicillins; D-ampicillin, L-α-phenoxyethylpenicillin, penicillin G, and penicillin V, and on five biologically inactive or much less active penicillins: L-ampicillin, D-α-phenoxyethylpenicillin, N-methylpenicillin G, 6α-methylpenicillin G, and bisnorpenicillin G. Antibacterial activity is found to be associated with the existence of a global minimum having a compact structure, whose convex face is accessible to a penicillin binding protein (PBP), with the C3-carboxyl group and the side-chain N-H exposed on this face. Using the MMPEP parameters of MMP2(85), a conformational analysis has been performed on phenylacetyl-D-Ala-D-Ala-O−, a peptide model of the normal substrate of a PBP. Labischinski's global minimum has been reproduced, along with structures that correspond to Tipper and Strominger's proposal that the N4—C7 bond of a penicillin corresponds to the Ala–Ala peptide bond, and to Hasan's proposal that the N4—C5 bond of penicillin corresponds to the peptide bond. For both models, conformations of the peptide related to the pseudoaxial and pseudoequatorial conformations of the thiazolidine ring of penicillin G have been examined. It is concluded that penicillin is not a structural analog of the global minimum of the peptide; however, comparisons based on unbound conformations of PBP substrates are unable to determine which model is more appropriate, or which conformation of penicillin G is the biologically significant one. Using the ECEPP/MMPEP strategy, a model of the active site of a PBP has been obtained, following a search of 200,000 structures of the peptide Ac-NH-Val-Gly-Ser-Val-Thr-Lys-NH-Me. This peptide contains the sequence at the active site of a PBP of Streptomyces R61, for which it is also known that the C3-carboxyl group of penicillin binds to the ε-amino group of lysine, and the β-lactam reacts chemically with the serine OH. The lysine and serine side chains and the C-terminal carbonyl group are found to occupy the concave face of the active site model.A strategy for the docking of penicillins or peptides to this model, with full minimization of the conformational energies of the complexes, has been devised. All active penicillins bind through strong hydrogen bonds to the C3-carboxyl group and the side-chain N-H, and with a four-centered relationship between the O-H of serine and the (O)C-N of the β-lactam ring. The geometrical parameters of this relationship are reminiscent of those found in the gas phase transition state of neutral hydration of a carbonyl group. When the energies of formation and geometries of the pseudoaxial and pseudoequatorial penicillin G complexes are examined, there is now a clear preference for the binding of the pseudoaxial conformation, which is the global minimum of the uncomplexed penicillin in this case. A similar examination of the peptide complexes reveals that only the conformation of the peptide that corresponds to Tipper and Strominger's model, and is based on the pseudoaxial conformation of penicillin G, can form a complex with a geometry and energy comparable to those of a biologically active penicillin.


Author(s):  
Marie-Rose Van Calsteren ◽  
Ricardo Reyes-Chilpa ◽  
Chistopher K Jankowski ◽  
Fleur Gagnon ◽  
Simón Hernández-Ortega ◽  
...  

The tropical tree Calophyllum brasiliense (Clusiaceae) grows in the rain forests from Brazil to Mexico. Its leaves, as well as those of other Calophyllum species, are rich sources of chromanone acids, such as apetalic acid, isoapetalic acid, and their derivatives. Apetalic acid has shown significant antimycobacterial activity. The biological activity of apetalic acid has been related to the configuration of three asymmetric centers and the stereochemistry of the molecule; however, the C-19 configuration in the acidic side chain has not been fully resolved. For this reason, the unequivocal determination of the absolute configuration by means of X-ray crystallography in a sample of unique homogeneous apetalic acid stereoisomer was the most important point to start this study. We prepared some chiral amides using the carboxyl group. We determined the C-19 stereochemistry of apetalic acid, and its specific chiral derivatives, using NMR, X-ray diffraction methods, and molecular mechanics. Finally, we observed that steric hindrance in the side chain of apetalic acid leads to restriction of rotation around the pivotal link C-10 and C-19 establishing chiral centers at C2(R), C3(S), and C19(R). We were able to separate derivatives of these two high-rotatory-barrier conformers of apetalic acid by forming diastereoisomeric amides with phenylglycine methyl ester having a chiral center at C-2’. Our results allowed the conclusion of the existence of atropisomerism in the apetalic acid molecule.


2011 ◽  
Vol 106 (2) ◽  
pp. 704-709 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katie L. Bullinger ◽  
Paul Nardelli ◽  
Qingbo Wang ◽  
Mark M. Rich ◽  
Timothy C. Cope

Neurotoxic effects of oxaliplatin chemotherapy, including proprioceptive impairments, are debilitating and dose limiting. Here, we sought to determine whether oxaliplatin interrupts normal proprioceptive feedback by impairing sensory transduction of muscle length and force by neurons that are not damaged by dying-back neuropathy. Oxaliplatin was administered over 4 wk to rats in doses that produced systemic changes, e.g., decreased platelets and stunted weight gain, but no significant abnormality in the terminal ends of primary muscle spindle sensory neurons. The absence of neuropathy enabled the determination of whether oxaliplatin caused functional deficits in sensory encoding without the confounding issue of axon death. Rats were anesthetized, and action potentials encoding muscle stretch and contraction were recorded intra-axonally from dorsal roots. In striking contrast with normal proprioceptors, those from oxaliplatin-treated rats typically failed to sustain firing during static muscle stretch. The ability of spindle afferents to sustain and centrally conduct trains of action potentials in response to rapidly repeated transient stimuli, i.e., vibration, demonstrated functional competence of the parent axons. These data provide the first evidence that oxaliplatin causes persistent and selective deficits in sensory transduction that are not due to axon degeneration. Our findings raise the possibility that even those axons that do not degenerate after oxaliplatin treatment may have functional deficits that worsen outcome.


1976 ◽  
Vol 153 (1) ◽  
pp. 137-138 ◽  
Author(s):  
K W Bentley

Quantitative N-terminal peptide-bond hydrolysis with the cis-beta-hydroxyaquo(triethylenetetramine) cobal (III) ion, i.e. β-[Co(trien)(OH)(OH2)]2+, is reported. The method has been demonstrated with 20 small peptides, a hexapeptide, bradykinin, insulin A chain (oxidized), glucagon and insulin. The procedure involves no acidic hydrolysis step and thus no destruction of labile amino acids.


2020 ◽  
Vol 76 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-72
Author(s):  
Lingxiao Zeng ◽  
Wei Ding ◽  
Quan Hao

The combination of cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) and X-ray crystallography reflects an important trend in structural biology. In a previously published study, a hybrid method for the determination of X-ray structures using initial phases provided by the corresponding parts of cryo-EM maps was presented. However, if the target structure of X-ray crystallography is not identical but homologous to the corresponding molecular model of the cryo-EM map, then the decrease in the accuracy of the starting phases makes the whole process more difficult. Here, a modified hybrid method is presented to handle such cases. The whole process includes three steps: cryo-EM map replacement, phase extension by NCS averaging and dual-space iterative model building. When the resolution gap between the cryo-EM and X-ray crystallographic data is large and the sequence identity is low, an intermediate stage of model building is necessary. Six test cases have been studied with sequence identity between the corresponding molecules in the cryo-EM and X-ray structures ranging from 34 to 52% and with sequence similarity ranging from 86 to 91%. This hybrid method consistently produced models with reasonable R work and R free values which agree well with the previously determined X-ray structures for all test cases, thus indicating the general applicability of the method for X-ray structure determination of homologues using cryo-EM maps as a starting point.


Author(s):  
Xinya Hemu ◽  
Abbas El Sahili ◽  
Side Hu ◽  
Kaho Wong ◽  
Yu Chen ◽  
...  

Asparaginyl endopeptidases (AEPs) are cysteine proteases which break Asx (Asn/Asp)–Xaa bonds in acidic conditions. Despite sharing a conserved overall structure with AEPs, certain plant enzymes such as butelase 1 act as a peptide asparaginyl ligase (PAL) and catalyze Asx–Xaa bond formation in near-neutral conditions. PALs also serve as macrocyclases in the biosynthesis of cyclic peptides. Here, we address the question of how a PAL can function as a ligase rather than a protease. Based on sequence homology of butelase 1, we identified AEPs and PALs from the cyclic peptide-producing plants Viola yedoensis (Vy) and Viola canadensis (Vc) of the Violaceae family. Using a crystal structure of a PAL obtained at 2.4-Å resolution coupled to mutagenesis studies, we discovered ligase-activity determinants flanking the S1 site, namely LAD1 and LAD2 located around the S2 and S1′ sites, respectively, which modulate ligase activity by controlling the accessibility of water or amine nucleophile to the S-ester intermediate. Recombinantly expressed VyPAL1–3, predicted to be PALs, were confirmed to be ligases by functional studies. In addition, mutagenesis studies on VyPAL1–3, VyAEP1, and VcAEP supported our prediction that LAD1 and LAD2 are important for ligase activity. In particular, mutagenesis targeting LAD2 selectively enhanced the ligase activity of VyPAL3 and converted the protease VcAEP into a ligase. The definition of structural determinants required for ligation activity of the asparaginyl ligases presented here will facilitate genomic identification of PALs and engineering of AEPs into PALs.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document