4.6 Article

Peptide-plane flipping in proteins

Journal

PROTEIN SCIENCE
Volume 10, Issue 11, Pages 2219-2227

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS
DOI: 10.1110/ps.23101

Keywords

backbone dihedrals; Ramachandran plot; left-handed alpha-helix; protein folding; structural interconversion

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A peptide-plane flip is a large-scale rotation of the peptide plane that takes the phi,psi angles at residues i and i + l to different structural regions in the Ramachandran plot with a comparatively small effect on the relative orientation of their side chains. This phenomenon, which is expected to play an important role during the early stages of protein folding, has been investigated using 76 proteins for which two high-resolution X-ray conformations are available. Peptide-plane flips are identified by looking for those cases where changes in \psi (i)\ + P\phi (i + l)l are large (>200 degrees), but changes in \psi (i) + phi (i + l) l are comparatively small (<50). Of a total of 23 cases, the most common peptide-plane flip was identified to be the type I to type II beta -turn interconversion. Although individually rarer, there are many other types of flips that are collectively more common. Given the four main accessible regions alpha (R), alpha (L), beta and epsilon, identified from the phi,psi distribution corresponding to non-hydrogen-bonded peptide planes, 32 main types of peptide-plane flip are identified. Only 8 of these are passive, in that they require only relatively minor adjustments in the orientation of adjacent peptide planes. Of these. only the type I to type II beta -turn interconversion, denoted, beta (i) + a(L)(i + 1) <-> 4 alpha (R)(i) + alpha (R)(i + 1), and the rarer alpha (R)(i) + a(L)(i + 1) <-> beta (i) + alpha (R)(i + l), do not involve the epsilon region Active peptide-plane flips affect the orientation of adjacent peptide planes. The flip, alpha (L)(i) + alpha (L)(i + 1) <-> beta (i) + beta (i + 1), of which one example was found, shows how concerted peptide-plane flips can convert the alpha (L) structure to the beta structure without affecting the relative orientations of the side chains.

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