Polytheonamide B, a 48 residue long highly cytotoxic polypeptide extracted from marine sponges contains amino acids of alternate chirality and the N-terminal region is rich in t-Leu residues. The aim of this study is to analyze the effect of these alternate chiralities and conformational behavior of various model peptides containing t-Leu, in order to explore their role in designing bioactive peptides that shall offer advantages comparable to polytheonamide B, while circumventing its limitations. The conformational behavior of various peptides constructed from t-Leu of the form Ac-(L/D-X-L/D-Y)n-NHMe, where X = Gly/Ala/Leu and Y = t-Leu has been studied and compared with the corresponding peptides containing Leu residue. The results show that the helix driving capacity of L and D forms of t-Leu is less than that of Leu residue. In poly t-Leu peptides, the population of collagen/inverse collagen-type structures or right/left handed-helical structures for L and D forms respectively is found to be chain length-dependent. The stability of the helical structures is increased by -2 kcal per residue over the collagen-type structure in poly t-Leu peptides with chain length greater than five residues. Molecular view of peptides in collagen-type structure shows that the bulky side chains of t-Leu residues mask the NH moieties of the peptide bond, while the carbonyl groups lying along the helical groove are accessible to the small solvent molecules. Molecular model building suggests that one ethylene glycol molecule interacts by forming hydrogen bonds with carbonyl groups of two adjacent t-Leu residues. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study of its own kind on the construction of a single-strand collagen/inverse collagen-type structure using unusual amino acid residues. Such synthetic collagen mimetic peptides shall exhibit specific affinity to natural collagen under controlled thermal conditions (heat or laser treatment) and hence can be explored as a new targeting method to attach therapeutic drugs to collagens in the living tissues and to biomaterials that incorporate natural collagens.
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Indian J Biochem Biophys
April 2007
Department of Biophysics, Panjab University, Chandigarh 160014, India.
Polytheonamide B, a 48 residue long highly cytotoxic polypeptide extracted from marine sponges contains amino acids of alternate chirality and the N-terminal region is rich in t-Leu residues. The aim of this study is to analyze the effect of these alternate chiralities and conformational behavior of various model peptides containing t-Leu, in order to explore their role in designing bioactive peptides that shall offer advantages comparable to polytheonamide B, while circumventing its limitations. The conformational behavior of various peptides constructed from t-Leu of the form Ac-(L/D-X-L/D-Y)n-NHMe, where X = Gly/Ala/Leu and Y = t-Leu has been studied and compared with the corresponding peptides containing Leu residue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Chem
September 1995
Department of Biochemistry, Tohoku College of Pharmacy, Sendai, Japan.
A series of deltorphin (DLT: Tyr-D-Met-Phe-His-Leu-Met-Asp-NH2) analogs in which Leu5 and/or Met6 were mainly replaced by t-Leu(Tle) and/or N alpha-alkylated glycine were synthesized and examined for their receptor binding properties and in vitro bioactivities by guinea pig ileum (GPI) and mouse vas deferens (MVD) assays. [Tle5]DLT(2) showed a dramatic decrease in the MVD potency when compared to the parent peptide and was found to have a potent delta receptor antagonist activity against various delta agonists with Ke values of 16-311 nM. Interestingly, the antagonist potency of 2 against DPDPE as agonist was 20-fold weaker than that against deltorphins or Leu-enkephalin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe partially protected fragment Boc-Cys(Acm)-Ser(Bu(t))-Asn-Leu-Ser(Bu(t))-Thr (Bu(t))-Cys(Acm)-Val-Leu-Gly-Lys(Boc)-Leu-Ser(Bu(t))-Gln-Glu(OBu(t ))- Leu-OH of salmon calcitonin was synthesized by the segment condensation in solution. Segments were synthesized by the DCC/HOBt method in solution with phenylhydrazide as a semipermanent protecting group for the carboxyl function of the C-terminal residue. The phenylhydrazide group was removed by oxidation with air oxygen catalyzed by copper pyridine complexes under mild conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStructural features influencing opioid activity of enkephalin analogs were investigated through the synthesis and evaluation of opioid receptor binding affinities of a series of cyclic dithioether-containing analogs and structurally related linear analogs of the cyclic, disulfide-containing peptides, [D-Pen2, D-Pen5]enkephalin and [D-Pen2, L-Pen5]enkephalin, where Pen (penicillamine) is beta, beta-dimethylcysteine. The major effect of increasing the ring size of the cyclic moiety from disulfide to dithioether analogs was a large decrease in delta opioid receptor binding affinity which suggests that relatively compact conformations of the peptide ligand are necessary for optimal binding to this receptor. The effect of bulky, hydrophobic residues at position 2 in the peptide chain was evaluated by preparing the linear analogs, [D-t-Leu2, D-t-Leu5]enkephalin (t-Leu, 2-amino-3,3-dimethylbutanoic acid) and [D-Abu2, D-t-Leu5]enkephalin (Abu, 2-aminobutanoic acid).
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