9 research outputs found

    Probing the self-assembly and the accompanying structural changes of hydrophobin SC3 on a hydrophobic surface by mass spectrometry

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    The fungal class I hydrophobin SC3 self-assembles into an amphipathic membrane at hydrophilic-hydrophobic interfaces such as the water-air and water-Teflon interface. During self-assembly, the water-soluble state of SC3 proceeds via the intermediate alpha-helical state to the stable end form called the beta-sheet state. Self-assembly of the hydrophobin at the Teflon surface is arrested in the alpha-helical state. The beta-sheet state can be induced at elevated temperature in the presence of detergent. The structural changes of SC3 were monitored by various mass spectrometry techniques. We show that the so-called second loop of SC3 (C39-S72) has a high affinity for Teflon. Binding of this part of SC3 to Teflon was accompanied by the formation of alpha-helical structure and resulted in low solvent accessibility. The solvent-protected region of the second loop extended upon conversion to the beta-sheet state. In contrast, the C-terminal part of SC3 became more exposed to the solvent. The results indicate that the second loop of class I hydrophobins plays a pivotal role in self-assembly at the hydrophilic-hydrophobic interface. Of interest, this loop is much smaller in case of class II hydrophobins, which may explain the differences in their assembly

    A selectively deprotectable triazacyclophane scaffold for the construction of artificial receptors

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    The synthesis of a triazacylclophane scaffold bearing a set of selectively removable protecting groups is described, This versatile scaffold, which can be linked to a solid support, allows the attachment of three different side chains and can therefore be used for the combinatorial synthesis of libraries of artificial receptor molecules of high structural diversity

    Role of solution conformation and flexibility of short peptide ligands that bind to the p56(lck) SH2 domain

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    A general approach in drug design is making ligands more rigid in order to avoid loss in conformational entropy (ΔSconf) upon receptor binding. We hypothesized that in the high affinity binding of pYEEI peptide ligands to the p56lck SH2 domain this loss in ΔSconf might be diminished due to preorganization of the fourfold negatively charged pYEEI peptide in the bound, extended, conformation. A thermodynamic analysis was performed on the peptides Ac-pYEEI-NH2, Ac-pYAAI-NH2 and Ac-pYGGI-NH2 using surface plasmon resonance (SPR) competition experiments to assay affinity constants at different temperatures. To study the effect of solution conformation and flexibility a computational conformation analysis was performed from which low energy conformations in solution were calculated, and Sconf estimated. It was found that the calculated low energy conformations for especially the pYE moiety in solution resemble that in the bound state. In the calculated minimum energy conformation in solution isoleucine is bent towards the pY aromatic ring, the occurrence of such conformation is experimentally confirmed by NMR. The estimated values for Sconf of the EE- and AA-peptide were similar, suggesting no predominant role of preorganization of the solution conformation due to electrostatic repulsion. Apparently the thermodynamics obey the same entropy-enthalpy compensation relationship, which also was found to hold for other peptides and peptidomimetics binding to p60src family SH2 domains. The implications of the results for drug design are discussed

    Probing the self-assembly and the accompanying structural changes of hydrophobin SC3 on a hydrophobic surface by mass spectrometry

    No full text
    The fungal class I hydrophobin SC3 self-assembles into an amphipathic membrane at hydrophilic-hydrophobic interfaces such as the water-air and water-Teflon interface. During self-assembly, the water-soluble state of SC3 proceeds via the intermediate alpha-helical state to the stable end form called the beta-sheet state. Self-assembly of the hydrophobin at the Teflon surface is arrested in the alpha-helical state. The beta-sheet state can be induced at elevated temperature in the presence of detergent. The structural changes of SC3 were monitored by various mass spectrometry techniques. We show that the so-called second loop of SC3 (C39-S72) has a high affinity for Teflon. Binding of this part of SC3 to Teflon was accompanied by the formation of alpha-helical structure and resulted in low solvent accessibility. The solvent-protected region of the second loop extended upon conversion to the beta-sheet state. In contrast, the C-terminal part of SC3 became more exposed to the solvent. The results indicate that the second loop of class I hydrophobins plays a pivotal role in self-assembly at the hydrophilic-hydrophobic interface. Of interest, this loop is much smaller in case of class II hydrophobins, which may explain the differences in their assembly

    Nat Commun

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    Peptides have gained so much attention in the last decade that they are now part of the main strategies, with small molecules and biologics, for developing new medicines. Despite substantial progress, the successful development of peptides as drugs still requires a number of limitations to be addressed, including short in vivo half-lives and poor membrane permeability. Here, we describe the use of oligourea foldamers as tool to improve the pharmaceutical properties of GLP-1, a 31 amino acid peptide hormone involved in metabolism and glycemic control. Our strategy consists in replacing four consecutive amino acids of GLP-1 by three consecutive ureido residues by capitalizing on the structural resemblance of oligourea and α-peptide helices. The efficacy of the approach is demonstrated with three GLP-1-oligourea hybrids showing prolonged activity in vivo. Our findings should enable the use of oligoureas in other peptides to improve their pharmaceutical properties and may provide new therapeutic applications
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