Yi Zhang, Klaus Schulten, Martin Gruebele, Paramjit S. Bansal, David Wilson,
and Norelle L. Daly.
Disulfide bridges: bringing together frustrated structure in a
bioactive peptide.
Biophysical Journal, 110:1744-1752, 2016.
(PMC: PMC4850350)
ZHAN2016A
Disulfide bridges are commonly found covalent bonds that are usually believed to maintain structural stability of
proteins. Here, we investigate the influence of disulfide bridges on protein dynamics through molecular dynamics simulations on
the cysteine-rich trypsin inhibitor MCoTI-II with three disulfide bridges. Correlation analysis of the reduced cyclic peptide shows
that two of the three disulfide distances (Cys-Cys and Cys-Cys) are anticorrelated within 1 s of bridge formation or
dissolution: when the peptide is in nativelike structures and one of the distances shortens to allow bond formation, the other
tends to lengthen. Simulations over longer timescales, when the denatured state is less structured, do not show the anticorrelation.
We propose that the native state contains structural elements that frustrate one another’s folding, and that the two bridges
are critical for snapping the frustrated native structure into place. In contrast, the Cys-Cys bridge is predicted to form together
with either of the other two bridges. Indeed, experimental chromatography and nuclear magnetic resonance data show that an
engineered peptide with the Cys-Cys bridge deleted can still fold into its near-native structure even in its noncyclic form, confirming
the lesser role of the Cys-Cys bridge. The results highlight the importance of disulfide bridges in a small bioactive peptide
to bring together frustrated structure in addition to maintaining protein structural stability.
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