Abstract
In proteins, proline-aromatic sequences exhibit increased frequencies of cis-proline amide bonds, via proposed C–H/π interactions between the aromatic ring and either the proline ring or the backbone C–Hα of the residue prior to proline. These interactions would be expected to result in tryptophan, as the most electron-rich aromatic residue, exhibiting the highest frequency of cis-proline. However, prior results from bioinformatics studies on proteins and experiments on proline-aromatic sequences in peptides have not revealed a clear correlation between the properties of the aromatic ring and the population of cis-proline. An investigation of the effects of aromatic residue (aromatic ring properties) on the conformation of proline-aromatic sequences was conducted using three distinct approaches: (1) NMR spectroscopy in model peptides of the sequence Ac-TGPAr-NH2 (Ar = encoded and unnatural aromatic amino acids); (2) bioinformatics analysis of structures in proline-aromatic sequences in the PDB; and (3) computational investigation using DFT and MP2 methods on models of proline-aromatic sequences and interactions. C–H/π and hydrophobic interactions were observed to stabilize local structures in both the trans-proline and cis-proline conformations, with both proline amide conformations exhibiting C–H/π interactions between the aromatic ring and Hα of the residue prior to proline (Hα-trans-Pro-aromatic and Hα-cis-Pro-aromatic interactions) and/or with the proline ring (trans-ProH-aromatic and cis-ProH-aromatic interactions). These C–H/π interactions were strongest with tryptophan (Trp) and weakest with cationic histidine (HisH+). Aromatic interactions with histidine were modulated in strength by His ionization state. Proline-aromatic sequences were associated with specific conformational poses, including type I and type VI β-turns. C–H/π interactions at the pre-proline Hα, which were stronger than interactions at Pro, stabilize normally less favorable conformations, including the ζ or αL conformations at the pre-proline residue, cis-proline, and/or the g+ χ1 rotamer or αL conformation at the aromatic residue. These results indicate that proline-aromatic sequences, especially Pro-Trp sequences, are loci to nucleate turns, helices, loops, and other local structures in proteins. These results also suggest that mutations that introduce proline-aromatic sequences, such as the R406W mutation that is associated with protein misfolding and aggregation in the microtubule-binding protein tau, might result in substantial induced structure, particularly in intrinsically disordered regions of proteins.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information: Proline-Aromatic Sequences Stabilize Turns via C–H/π interactions in both cis-Proline and trans-Proline
Description
Synthesis and characterization data of all peptides, additional 1-D and 2-D NMR spectra, tabulation of NMR data, additional bioinformatics data, additional details on calculations, and coordinates of all structures resulting from full geometry optimization calculations.
Actions