2 research outputs found
A versatile modelling approach to determine the hydrophobicity of peptides at the atomic level
This study describes a versatile computational method to determine the hydrophobicity of small peptides at the atomic level. Free energies of transfer for individual atoms in peptide structures were derived, utilising two specifically defined parameters: (i) the water-excluding distance to define the dynamic interface between a peptide solute and its surrounding solvent and (ii) the corresponding hydrophobicity index as a relative measure for water occlusion/repulsion. The method was tested on a range of small peptide models (Ac-X-NH2, G-X-G, Ac-WL-X-LL and Ac-GG-X-GG-NH2) and several derivatives of these structures, whereby X was any of the 20 most common amino acids that naturally occur in polypeptides or proteins. The advantage of this new method lies in its versatility, ease to implement and capability to provide information on the hydrophobicity characteristics at the atomic level. The approach also encapsulates the impact of factors that influence these properties, but which have hitherto been difficult to accurately quantify, e.g. steric hindrance or proximity effects due to nearby polarised atoms. The method is not conditional on the knowledge of hydrophobicity parameters from the literature and does not require a sophisticated computer software/hardware to enable the atomic solvent-accessible surface areas or other hydrophobicity parameters to be de novo obtained.</p