Sterically allowed configuration space for amino acid dipeptides

ORAL

Abstract

Despite recent improvements in computational methods for protein design, we still lack a quantitative, predictive understanding of the intrinsic propensities for amino acids to be in particular backbone or side-chain conformations. This question has remained unsettled for years because of the discrepancies between different experimental approaches. To address it, I performed all-atom hard-sphere simulations of hydrophobic residues with stereo-chemical constraints and non-attractive steric interactions between non-bonded atoms for ALA, ILE, LEU and VAL dipeptide mimetics. For these hard-sphere MD simulations, I show that transitions between $\alpha$-helix and $\beta$-sheet structures only occur when the bond angle $\tau(N-C_{\alpha}-C)>110^{\circ}$, and the probability distribution of bond angles for structures in the `bridge' region of $\phi$-$\psi$ space is shifted to larger angles compared to that in other regions. In contrast, the relevant bond-angle distributions obtained from most molecular dynamics packages are broader and shifter to larger values. I encounter similar correlations between bond angles and side-chain dihedral angles. The success of these studies is an argument for re-incorporating local stereochemical constraints into computational protein design methodology.

Authors

  • Diego Caballero

    • Yale Univ
  • Jukka Maatta

    • Aalto Univ
    • Department of Chemistry, Aalto University, Helsinki, Finland
  • Maria Sammalkorpi

    • Aalto Univ
    • Department of Chemistry, Aalto University, Helsinki, Finland
    • Aalto University, Department of Chemistry
  • Corey S. O'Hern

    • Yale University
    • Yale Univ
    • Yale University Departments of Mechanical Engineering \& Materials Science and Physics
  • Lynne Regan

    • Yale University
    • Yale Univ