Packed protein bilayers in the 0.90 å resolution structure of a designed alpha helical bundle
Open Access
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Protein Science
- Vol. 8 (7) , 1400-1409
- https://doi.org/10.1110/ps.8.7.1400
Abstract
A 12‐residue peptide designed to form an α‐helix and self‐associate into an antiparallel 4‐α‐helical bundle yields a 0.9 Å crystal structure revealing unanticipated features. The structure was determined by direct phasing with the “Shake‐and‐Bake” program, and contains four crystallographically distinct 12‐mer peptide molecules plus solvent for a total of 479 atoms. The crystal is formed from nearly ideal α‐helices hydrogen bonded head‐to‐tail into columns, which in turn pack side‐by‐side into sheets spanning the width of the crystal. Within each sheet, the α‐helices run antiparallel and are closely spaced (9–10 Å center‐to‐center). The sheets are more loosely packed against each other (13–14 Å between helix centers). Each sheet is amphiphilic: apolar leucine side chains project from one face, charged lysine and glutamate side chains from the other face. The sheets are stacked with two polar faces opposing and two apolar faces opposing. The result is a periodic biomaterial composed of packed protein bilayers, with alternating polar and apolar interfaces. All of the 30 water molecules in the unit cell lie in the polar interface or between the stacked termini of helices. A section through the sheet reveals that the helices packed at the apolar interface resemble the four‐α‐helical bundle of the design, but the helices overhang parts of the adjacent bundles, and the helix crossing angles are less steep than intended (7–11° rather than 18°).Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Solvent content of protein crystalsPublished by Elsevier ,2006
- Centrosymmetric bilayers in the 0.75 å resolution structure of a designed alpha‐helical peptide, D, L‐Alpha‐1Protein Science, 1999
- The crystal structure of the designed trimeric coiled coil coil‐VaLd: Implications for engineering crystals and supramolecular assembliesProtein Science, 1997
- [20] Processing of X-ray diffraction data collected in oscillation modePublished by Elsevier ,1997
- Statistical Expectation Value of the Debye–Waller Factor and E(hkl) Values for Macromolecular CrystalsActa Crystallographica Section D-Biological Crystallography, 1996
- A novel, multilayer structure of a helical peptideProtein Science, 1996
- SnB: crystal structure determination via shake-and-bakeJournal of Applied Crystallography, 1994
- On the Application of the Minimal Principle to Solve Unknown StructuresScience, 1993
- Structural heterogeneity in protein crystalsBiochemistry, 1986
- Prediction of the Secondary Structure of Proteins from their Amino Acid SequencePublished by Wiley ,1979