4.8 Article

Mixed 14/16 Helices in the Gas Phase: Conformation-Specific Spectroscopy of Z-(Gly)n, n=1, 3, 5

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 134, Issue 41, Pages 17186-17201

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja306652c

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [CHE 1213289]

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Single-conformation ultraviolet and infrared spectroscopy has been carried out on the neutral peptide series, Z-(Gly)(n)-OH, n = 1,3,5 (ZGn) and Z-(Gly)(5)-NHMe (ZG5-NHMe) in the isolated environment of a supersonic expansion. The N-terminal Z-cap (carboxybenzyl) provides an ultraviolet chromophore for resonant two-photon ionization (R2PI) spectroscopy. Conformation-specific infrared spectra were recorded in double resonance using resonant ion-dip infrared spectroscopy (RIDIRS). By comparing the experimental spectra with the predictions of DFT M05-2X/6-31+G(d) calculations, the structures could be characterized in terms of the sequence of intramolecular H-bonded rings of varying size. Despite the enhanced flexibility of the glycine residues, a total of only six conformers were observed among the four molecules. Two conformers for ZG1 were found with the major conformation taking on an extended, planar beta-strand conformation. Two conformers were observed for ZG3, with the majority of the population in a C11/C7/C7/pi(g-) structure that forms a full loop of the glycine chain. Both ZG5 molecules had their population primarily in a single conformation, with structures characteristic of the first stages of a mixed beta-helix. C14/C16 H-bonded rings in opposing directions (N -> C and C -> N) tie the helix together, with nearest-neighbor C7 rings turning the backbone so that it forms the helix. phi/psi angles alternate in sign along the backbone, as is characteristic of the mixed, C14/C16 beta-helix. The calculated conformational energies of these structures are unusually stable relative to all others, with energies significantly lower than the PGI/PGII conformations characteristic of polyglycine structures in solution and in the crystalline form, where intermolecular H-bonds play a role.

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