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Kinetic steps for α-helix formation.

R.A. Bertsch, Nagarajan Vaidehi, Sunney I. Chan, William A. Goddard III

1998Proteins: Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics, 33(3), 343–35743cited

Abstract

The kinetics of alpha-helix formation in polyalanine and polyglycine eicosamers (20-mers) were examined using torsional-coordinate molecular dynamics (MD). Of one hundred fifty-five MD experiments on extended (Ala)20 carried out for 0.5 ns each, 129 (83%) formed a persistent alpha-helix. In contrast, the extended state of (Gly)20 only formed a right-handed alpha-helix in two of the 20 MD experiments (10%), and these helices were not as long or as persistent as those of polyalanine. These simulations show helix formation to be a competition between the rates of (a) forming local hydrogen bonds (i.e. hydrogen bonds between any residue i and its i + 2, i + 3, i + 4, or i + 5th neighbor) and (b) forming nonlocal hydrogen bonds (HBs) between residues widely separated in sequence. Local HBs grow rapidly into an alpha-helix; but nonlocal HBs usually retard helix formation by "trapping" the polymer in irregular, "balled-up" structures. Most trajectories formed some nonlocal HBs, sometimes as many as eight. But, for (Ala)20, most of these eventually rearranged to form local HBs that lead to alpha-helices. A simple kinetic model describes the rate of converting nonlocal HBs into alpha-helices. Torsional-coordinate MD speeds folding by eliminating bond and angle degrees of freedom and reducing dynamical friction. Thus, the observed 210 ps half-life for helix formation is likely to be a lower bound on the real rate. However, we believe the sequential steps observed here mirror those of real systems.

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Bertsch, R., Vaidehi, N., Chan, S. I., & III, W. A. G. (1998). Kinetic steps for α-helix formation.. *Proteins: Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics*, *33*(3), 343–357. https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-0134(19981115)33:3<343::AID-PROT4>3.0.CO;2-B