Conformational structure, dynamics, and solvation energies of small alanine peptides in water and carbon tetrachloride.

J Pharm Sci

Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40536, USA.

Published: June 2006

The rate-limiting barrier for peptide transport across lipid bilayers is the nonpolar hydrocarbon interior. Permeating peptides may undergo conformational changes during their transfer from an aqueous solution into the barrier domain, thus facilitating peptide transport. To test this hypothesis, all-atom and explicit-solvent molecular dynamics (MD) simulations have been conducted on a series of small peptides, p-toluyl-Ala(n) (n = 0-3) used previously in transport experiments, to explore their conformational structures, dynamics and solvation free energies in water and carbon tetrachloride (CCl(4)). The conformations of the p-toluyl alanine di- and tri-peptides in water were found to be far from random coils, with P(II) and alpha(R) dominating but with smaller populations of seven-membered (c(7)) and five-membered rings (c(5)). In contrast, the seven-membered ring, c(7), along with c(5) dominated in CCl(4). These results indicate that the conformational preferences of the alanine peptides are highly sensitive to solvent. Dynamically, stable seven-membered ring formation occurred on a time scale of 10 ps while larger ring-sizes (e.g., 10-membered rings) were observed much less frequently. The values of adjacent torsional angles (phi(1), psi(1)) were dependent on neighboring torsional angles. Thermal motions of neighboring torsions leading to transitions between c(7), c(5), alpha(R), and P(II) conformers were highly cooperative while longer range correlations between transitions of adjacent sets of torsions (phi(1), psi(1)) and (phi(2), psi(2)) were less evident. Peptide folding in CCl(4) lowers the intramolecular electrostatic energies. This, along with hydrophobic interactions, favors partitioning into CCl(4). These effects only partially offset other types of intramolecular interactions and peptide-solvent polar interactions that are more favorable in water, leading to net transfer free energies (3-7 kcal/mol) that disfavor peptide transfer from water into carbon tetrachloride.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jps.20453DOI Listing

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