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Solution NMR and racemic crystallography provide insights into a novel structural class of cyclic plant peptides

Head-to-tail cyclic and disulfide-rich peptides are natural products with applications in drug design. Among these are the PawS-Derived Peptides (PDPs) produced in seeds of the daisy plant family. PDP-23 is a unique member of this class in that it is twice the typical size and adopts two β-hairpins...

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Autores principales: Payne, Colton D., Vadlamani, Grishma, Hajiaghaalipour, Fatemeh, Muhammad, Taj, Fisher, Mark F., Andersson, Håkan S., Göransson, Ulf, Clark, Richard J., Bond, Charles S., Mylne, Joshua S., Rosengren, K. Johan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: RSC 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8637875/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34977583
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1cb00155h
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author Payne, Colton D.
Vadlamani, Grishma
Hajiaghaalipour, Fatemeh
Muhammad, Taj
Fisher, Mark F.
Andersson, Håkan S.
Göransson, Ulf
Clark, Richard J.
Bond, Charles S.
Mylne, Joshua S.
Rosengren, K. Johan
author_facet Payne, Colton D.
Vadlamani, Grishma
Hajiaghaalipour, Fatemeh
Muhammad, Taj
Fisher, Mark F.
Andersson, Håkan S.
Göransson, Ulf
Clark, Richard J.
Bond, Charles S.
Mylne, Joshua S.
Rosengren, K. Johan
author_sort Payne, Colton D.
collection PubMed
description Head-to-tail cyclic and disulfide-rich peptides are natural products with applications in drug design. Among these are the PawS-Derived Peptides (PDPs) produced in seeds of the daisy plant family. PDP-23 is a unique member of this class in that it is twice the typical size and adopts two β-hairpins separated by a hinge region. The β-hairpins, both stabilised by a single disulfide bond, fold together into a V-shaped tertiary structure creating a hydrophobic core. In water two PDP-23 molecules merge their hydrophobic cores to form a square prism quaternary structure. Here, we synthesised PDP-23 and its enantiomer comprising d-amino acids and achiral glycine, which allowed us to confirm these solution NMR structural data by racemic crystallography. Furthermore, we discovered the related PDP-24. NMR analysis showed that PDP-24 does not form a dimeric structure and it has poor water solubility, but in less polar solvents adopts near identical secondary and tertiary structure to PDP-23. The natural role of these peptides in plants remains enigmatic, as we did not observe any antimicrobial or insecticidal activity. However, the plasticity of these larger PDPs and their ability to change structure under different conditions make them appealing peptide drug scaffolds.
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spelling pubmed-86378752021-12-30 Solution NMR and racemic crystallography provide insights into a novel structural class of cyclic plant peptides Payne, Colton D. Vadlamani, Grishma Hajiaghaalipour, Fatemeh Muhammad, Taj Fisher, Mark F. Andersson, Håkan S. Göransson, Ulf Clark, Richard J. Bond, Charles S. Mylne, Joshua S. Rosengren, K. Johan RSC Chem Biol Chemistry Head-to-tail cyclic and disulfide-rich peptides are natural products with applications in drug design. Among these are the PawS-Derived Peptides (PDPs) produced in seeds of the daisy plant family. PDP-23 is a unique member of this class in that it is twice the typical size and adopts two β-hairpins separated by a hinge region. The β-hairpins, both stabilised by a single disulfide bond, fold together into a V-shaped tertiary structure creating a hydrophobic core. In water two PDP-23 molecules merge their hydrophobic cores to form a square prism quaternary structure. Here, we synthesised PDP-23 and its enantiomer comprising d-amino acids and achiral glycine, which allowed us to confirm these solution NMR structural data by racemic crystallography. Furthermore, we discovered the related PDP-24. NMR analysis showed that PDP-24 does not form a dimeric structure and it has poor water solubility, but in less polar solvents adopts near identical secondary and tertiary structure to PDP-23. The natural role of these peptides in plants remains enigmatic, as we did not observe any antimicrobial or insecticidal activity. However, the plasticity of these larger PDPs and their ability to change structure under different conditions make them appealing peptide drug scaffolds. RSC 2021-09-13 /pmc/articles/PMC8637875/ /pubmed/34977583 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1cb00155h Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Payne, Colton D.
Vadlamani, Grishma
Hajiaghaalipour, Fatemeh
Muhammad, Taj
Fisher, Mark F.
Andersson, Håkan S.
Göransson, Ulf
Clark, Richard J.
Bond, Charles S.
Mylne, Joshua S.
Rosengren, K. Johan
Solution NMR and racemic crystallography provide insights into a novel structural class of cyclic plant peptides
title Solution NMR and racemic crystallography provide insights into a novel structural class of cyclic plant peptides
title_full Solution NMR and racemic crystallography provide insights into a novel structural class of cyclic plant peptides
title_fullStr Solution NMR and racemic crystallography provide insights into a novel structural class of cyclic plant peptides
title_full_unstemmed Solution NMR and racemic crystallography provide insights into a novel structural class of cyclic plant peptides
title_short Solution NMR and racemic crystallography provide insights into a novel structural class of cyclic plant peptides
title_sort solution nmr and racemic crystallography provide insights into a novel structural class of cyclic plant peptides
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8637875/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34977583
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1cb00155h
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