화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.121, No.15, 3536-3545, 2017
Redox-Driven Conformational Dynamics in a Photosystem-II-Inspired beta-Hairpin Maquette Determined through Spectroscopy and Simulation
Tyrosine-based radical transfer plays an important role in photosynthesis, respiration, and DNA synthesis. Radical transfer can occur either by electron transfer (ET) or proton coupled electron transfer (PCET), depending on the pH. Reversible conformational changes in the surrounding protein matrix may control reactivity of radical intermediates. De novo designed Peptide A is a synthetic 18 amino-acid beta-hairpin, which contains a single tyrosine (Y5) and carries out a kinetically significant PCET reaction between Y5 and a cross-strand histidine (H14). In Peptide A, amide II' (CN) changes are observed in the UV resonance Raman (UVRR) spectrum, associated with tyrosine ET and PCET; these bands were attributed previously to a reversible change in secondary structure. Here, we use molecular dynamics simulations to define this conformational change in Peptide A and its H14-to-cyclohexylalanine variant, Peptide C. Three different Y5 charge states, tyrosine (YH), tyrosinate (Y-), and neutral tyrosyl radical (Y center dot), are considered. The simulations show that Peptide A-YH and A-Y- retain secondary structure and noncovalent interactions, whereas A-Y center dot is unstable. In contrast, both Peptide C-Y- and Peptide C-Y center dot are unstable, due to the loss of the Y5-H14 pi-pi interaction. These simulations are consistent with previous UVRR experimental results on the two beta-hairpins. Furthermore, they demonstrate the ability of simulations using fixed-charge force fields to accurately capture redox-linked conformational dynamics in a beta-strand peptide.