4.8 Article

Crystallographic Characterization of Helical Secondary Structures in 2:1 and 1:2 α/β-Peptides

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 131, Issue 8, Pages 2917-2924

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja808168y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [CHE-0551920]
  2. Samsung Scholarship Foundation

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Oligomers containing both alpha- and beta-amino acid residues (alpha/beta-peptides) are intriguing as potential foldamers. A large set of alpha/beta-peptide backbones can be generated by combining a- and [I-amino acid residues in different patterns; however, most research to date has focused on the simplest pattern, 1:1 alpha:beta. We have begun to explore the range of variation that can be achieved with alpha-residue/beta-residue combinations by examining the folding behavior of oligomers that contain 2:1 and 1:2 alpha:beta patterns. The beta-residues in our systems have a five-membered-ring constraint (trans-2-aminocyclopentanecarboxylic acid (ACPC) residues), because these preorganized subunits strongly promote helical folding for 1:1 alpha:beta backbones and pure backbones. Previously we concluded that two helical conformations are available to 2:1 and 1:2 alpha/beta-peptides containing ACPC or analogously constrained beta 0-residues, one helix defined by i,i+3 C=O center dot center dot center dot H-N backbone hydrogen bonds and the other defined by i,i+4 C=O center dot center dot center dot H-N hydrogen bonds. These deductions were based on 2D NMR analysis of a 2:1 heptamer and a 1:2 hexamer in methanol. Crystallographic analysis of a pair of analogous nonpolar alpha/beta-peptides showed only the i,i+3 hydrogen-bonded helical conformations. We now report four new crystal structures of 2:1 alpha/beta-peptides, ranging in length from 5 to 11 residues, and six new crystal structures of 1:2 alpha/beta-peptides, ranging in length from 6 to 10 residues. All 10 of these new structures are fully helical, and all helices display the i,i+3 C=O center dot center dot center dot H-N hydrogen bonding pattern. These crystallographic data sets, collectively, provide high structural definition for the i,i+3 hydrogen-bonded helical secondary structures available to these foldamer backbones.

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