## Abstract The 173–195 segment corresponding to the helix 2 of the globular PrP domain is a good candidate to be one of the several ‘spots’ of intrinsic structural flexibility, which might induce local destabilization and concur to protein transformation, leading to aggregation‐prone conformations
A thermodynamic approach to the conformational preferences of the 180–195 segment derived from the human prion protein α2-helix
✍ Scribed by Luisa Ronga; Pasquale Palladino; Raffaele Ragone; Ettore Benedetti; Filomena Rossi
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 200 KB
- Volume
- 15
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1075-2617
- DOI
- 10.1002/psc.1086
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
On consideration that intrinsic structural weakness could affect the segment spanning the α2‐helical residues 173–195 of the PrP, we have investigated the conformational stabilities of some synthetic Ala‐scanned analogs of the peptide derived from the 180–195 C‐terminal sequence, using a novel approach whose theoretical basis originates from protein thermodynamics. Even though a quantitative comparison among peptides could not be assessed to rank them according to the effect caused by single amino acid substitution, as a general trend, all peptides invariably showed an appreciable preference for an α‐type organization, consistently with the fact that the wild‐type sequence is organized as an α‐helix in the native protein. Moreover, the substitution of whatever single amino acid in the wild‐type sequence reduced the gap between the α‐ and the β‐propensity, invariably enhancing the latter, but in any case this gap was larger than that evaluated for the full‐length α2‐helix‐derived peptide. It appears that the low β‐conformation propensity of the 180–195 region depends on the simultaneous presence of all of the Ala‐scanned residues, indirectly confirming that the N‐terminal 173–179 segment could play a major role in determining the chameleon conformational behavior of the entire 173–195 region in the PrP. Copyright © 2008 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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