1 research outputs found
Conformational Study of Z‑Glu-OH and Z‑Arg-OH: Dispersion Interactions versus Conventional Hydrogen Bonding
The gas-phase conformational preferences of the model
dipeptides
Z-Glu-OH and Z-Arg-OH have been studied in the low-temperature environment
of a supersonic jet. IR-UV ion-dip spectra obtained using the free
electron laser FELIX provide conformation-specific IR spectra, which
in combination with density functional theory (DFT) allow us to determine
the conformational structures of the peptides. Molecular dynamics
modeling using simulated annealing generates a variety of low-energy
structures, for which geometry optimization and frequency calculations
are then performed using the B3LYP functional with the 6-311+GÂ(d,p)
basis set. By comparing experimental and theoretical IR spectra, three
conformations for Z-Glu-OH and two for Z-Arg-OH have been identified.
For three of the five structures, the dispersion interaction provides
an important contribution to the stabilization, emphasizing the importance
of these forces in small peptides. Therefore, dispersion-corrected
DFT functionals (M05-2X and B97D) have also been employed in our theoretical
analysis. Second-order Møller–Plesset perturbation theory
(MP2) has been used as benchmark for the relative energies of the
different conformational structures. Finally, we address the ongoing
debate on the gas-phase structure of arginine by elucidating whether
isolated arginine is canonical, tautomeric, or zwitterionic