Tuning the Cooperativity of the Helix−Coil Transition by Aqueous Reverse Micelles
- 1 June 2006
- journal article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in The Journal of Physical Chemistry B
- Vol. 110 (24) , 11615-11619
- https://doi.org/10.1021/jp062362k
Abstract
We show in this letter that the thermodynamic properties of helical peptides can be tuned by varying the degrees of backbone hydration. The latter was achieved by solubilizing peptides in the water pool of sodium bis(2-ethylhexyl) sulfosuccinate (AOT) reverse micelles with different water contents or w0 values. Far-UV circular dichroism measurements on a series of alanine-rich peptides indicate that the helicity of shorter peptides is significantly increased in AOT reverse micelles at low w0 values, as compared to the corresponding helical content in buffer. This result therefore corroborates the previous simulation studies suggesting that desolvation of backbone CO and NH groups increases the stability of monomeric helices. In addition, it was found that the thermal unfolding transition of these peptides can either be very noncooperative or very cooperative, depending on w0 and peptide chain length. A simple model, which considers the heterogeneous distribution of the water molecules inside the polar core of AOT reverse micelles as well as the geometric confinement effect exerted on the peptide by the reverse micelles, was used to interpret these results.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of hexafluoroisopropanol alcohol on the structure of melittin: A molecular dynamics simulation studyProtein Science, 2005
- Proton Transfer in Nanoconfined Polar Solvents. 1. Free Energies and Solute PositionThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2005
- Organization and Dynamics of Melittin in Environments of Graded Hydration: A Fluorescence ApproachLangmuir, 2003
- Solvation Dynamics in Aqueous Reverse Micelles: A Computer Simulation StudyThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2001
- Effect of Reverse Micelle Size on the Librational Band of Confined Water and MethanolThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2001
- Clustering of Fluorine-Substituted Alcohols as a Factor Responsible for Their Marked Effects on Proteins and PeptidesJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1999
- Helix Formation in Unsolvated Alanine-Based Peptides: Helical Monomers and Helical DimersJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1999
- Trifluoroethanol Promotes Helix Formation by Destabilizing Backbone Exposure: Desolvation Rather than Native Hydrogen Bonding Defines the Kinetic Pathway of Dimeric Coiled Coil FoldingBiochemistry, 1998
- Mechanism of Helix Induction by Trifluoroethanol: A Framework for Extrapolating the Helix-Forming Properties of Peptides from Trifluoroethanol/Water Mixtures Back to WaterBiochemistry, 1997
- Solvent Influence on the Stability of the Peptide Hydrogen Bond: A Supramolecular Cooperative EffectThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1994