Advanced search×

Modeling of peptides containing D-amino acids: implications on cyclization

J Comput Aided Mol Des 23(9):677-689 (2009) PMID 19593648

Cyclic peptides are therapeutically attractive due to their high bioavailability, potential selectivity, and scaffold novelty. Furthermore, the presence of D-residues induces conformational preferences not followed by peptides consisting of naturally abundant L-residues. Therefore, comprehending how amino acids induce turns in peptides, subsequently facilitating cyclization, is significant in peptide design. Here, we performed 20-ns explicit-solvent molecular dynamics simulations for three diastereomeric peptides with stereochemistries: LLLLL, LLLDL, and LDLDL. Experimentally LLLLL and LDLDL readily cyclize, whereas LLLDL cyclizes in low yield. Simulations at 310 K produced conformations with inter-terminal hydrogen bonds that correlated qualitatively with the experimental cyclization trend. Energies obtained for representative structures from quantum chemical (B3LYP/PCM/cc-pVTZ//HF/6-31G*) calculations predicted pseudo-cyclic and extended conformations as the most stable for LLLLL and LLLDL, respectively, in agreement with the experimental data. In contrast, the most stable conformer predicted for peptide LDLDL was not a pseudo-cyclic structure. Moreover, D-residues preferred the experimentally less populated alpha(L) rotamers even when simulations were performed at a higher temperature and with strategically selected starting conformations. Energies calculated with molecular mechanics were consistent only with peptide LLLLL. Thus, the conformational preferences obtained for the all L: -amino acid peptide were in agreement with the experimental observations. Moreover, refinement of the force field is expected to provide far-reaching conformational sampling of peptides containing D-residues to further develop force field-based conformational-searching methods.

DOI: 10.1007/s10822-009-9295-y
Version: za2963e q8za1 q8zb3 q8zce q8zd1 q8zec q8zfb q8zg5

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. Peptide-binding motifs and characteristics for HLA -B*13:01 molecule.

    Tissue Antigens 81(6):442-8 (2013) PMID 23646949

    We searched for peptides bound to the HLA-B*13:01 molecule; 57 HLA-B*13:01-bound peptides in total were identified and 54 peptides were used to calculate frequency of amino acid residues to obtain binding motifs of HLA-B*13:01 molecule. The results showed P2, P3, and P9 were the primary binding anch...
  2. Cationic Host Defence Peptides: Potential as Antiviral Therapeutics.

    BioDrugs (2013) PMID 23649937

    We review the antiviral properties of several families of these host peptides and their potential to inform the design of novel therapeutics....
  3. Structural Basis for the Mutation-Induced Dysfunction of Human CYP2J2: A Computational Study.

    J Chem Inf Model (2013) PMID 23647230

    Arachidonic acid is an essential fatty acid in cells, acting as a key inflammatory intermediate in inflammatory reactions. In cardiac tissues, CYP2J2 can adopt arachidonic acid as a major substrate to produce epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EETs), which can protect endothelial cells from...