4.8 Article

Prediction of disulfide dihedral angles using chemical shifts

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue 31, Pages 6548-6556

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c8sc01423j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Postgraduate Award
  2. Australian Research Council Future Fellowship [FT130100890]
  3. Australian Research Council [FT130100890] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Cystine residues result from the formation of disulfide bonds between pairs of cysteine residues. This cross linking of the backbone is essential for the structure and activity of peptides and proteins. The conformation of a cystine side chain can be described using five dihedral angles, chi 1, chi 2, chi 3, chi 2, and chi 1', with cystines favouring certain combinations of these angles. 2D NMR spectroscopy is ideally suited for structure determination of disulfide-rich peptides, because of their small size and constrained nature. However, only limited information of the cystine side chain conformation can be determined by NMR spectroscopy, leading to ambiguity in the deduced 3D structures. Resolving accurate structures is important as disulfide-rich peptides have proven to be promising drug candidates in a number of fields, either as bioactive leads or scaffolds. Using a database of NMR chemical shifts combined with crystallographic structures, we have developed a method called DISH that uses support vector machines to predict the dihedral angles of cysteine side chains. It is able to successfully predict chi 2 angles with 91% accuracy, and has improved performance over existing prediction methods for chi 1 angles, with 87% accuracy. For 81% of cysteine residues, DISH successfully predicted both the chi 1 and chi 2 angles. By revisiting published solution structures of peptides determined using NMR spectroscopy, we assessed the impact of additional cystine dihedral restraints on the quality of 3D models. DISH improved the resolution and accuracy, highlighting the potential for improving the understanding of structure-activity relationships and rational development of peptide drugs.

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