4.6 Article

Cyclic peptides: backbone rigidification and capability of mimicking motifs at protein-protein interfaces

期刊

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
卷 23, 期 1, 页码 607-616

出版社

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0cp04633g

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资金

  1. Knez Family Faculty Investment Fund
  2. National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [R01GM124160]
  3. Tufts Technology Services
  4. NIH [P41-GM103311]

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Cyclization is commonly used to improve the target binding affinity of peptide-based probes and therapeutics; however, the specific impact of cyclization on peptide configurational entropy is poorly understood, requiring labor-intensive chemical synthesis and experimental characterization. Cyclization generally reduces backbone dihedral entropy and affects the conformational accessibility of cyclic peptides, providing insights into designing cyclic peptide inhibitors of protein-protein interactions.
Cyclization is commonly employed in efforts to improve the target binding affinity of peptide-based probes and therapeutics. Many structural motifs have been identified at protein-protein interfaces and provide promising targets for inhibitor design using cyclic peptides. Cyclized peptides are generally assumed to be rigidified relative to their linear counterparts. This rigidification potentially pre-organizes the molecules to interact properly with their targets. However, the actual impact of cyclization on, for example, peptide configurational entropy, is currently poorly understood in terms of both its magnitude and molecular-level origins. Moreover, even with thousands of desired structural motifs at hand, it is currently not possible to a priori identify the ones that are most promising to mimic using cyclic peptides nor to select the ideal linker length. Instead, labor-intensive chemical synthesis and experimental characterization of various cyclic peptide designs are required, in hopes of finding one with improved target affinity. Herein, using molecular dynamics simulations of polyglycines, we elucidated how head-to-tail cyclization impacts peptide backbone dihedral entropy and developed a simple strategy to rapidly screen for structures that can be reliably mimicked by preorganized cyclic peptides. As expected, cyclization generally led to a reduction in backbone dihedral entropy; notably, however, this effect was minimal when the length of polyglycines was 49 residues. We also found that the reduction in backbone dihedral entropy upon cyclization of small polyglycine peptides does not result from more restricted distributions of the dihedrals; rather, it was the correlations between specific dihedrals that caused the decrease in configurational entropy in the cyclic peptides. Using our comprehensive cyclo-Gn structural ensembles, we obtained a holistic picture of what conformations are accessible to cyclic peptides. Using hot loops'' recently identified at protein-protein interfaces as an example, we provide clear guidelines for choosing the easiest'' hot loops for cyclic peptides to mimic and for identifying appropriate cyclic peptide lengths. In conclusion, our results provide an understanding of the thermodynamics and structures of this interesting class of molecules. This information should prove particularly useful for designing cyclic peptide inhibitors of protein-protein interactions.

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