MULTICONFORMATIONAL ANALYSIS OF SOLUTION NOE DATA FOR THE AC-(L)PROLINE-(D)ALANINE-NHME DIPEPTIDE IN A NONPROTIC SOLVENT

Citation
Cr. Landis et al., MULTICONFORMATIONAL ANALYSIS OF SOLUTION NOE DATA FOR THE AC-(L)PROLINE-(D)ALANINE-NHME DIPEPTIDE IN A NONPROTIC SOLVENT, Journal of magnetic resonance. Series B, 109(1), 1995, pp. 44-59
Citations number
41
Categorie Soggetti
Physics, Atomic, Molecular & Chemical
ISSN journal
10641866
Volume
109
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
44 - 59
Database
ISI
SICI code
1064-1866(1995)109:1<44:MAOSND>2.0.ZU;2-H
Abstract
Solution NOE data for the dipeptide, Ac-(L)proline-(D)alanine-NHMe (1) , have been obtained in the viscous solvent, 75:25 polychlorotrifluoro ethylene:chloroform-d(1). In this solvent at a 500 MHz H-1 NMR spectro meter frequency, 1 exhibits large, negative NOE enhancements. The quan tified 2D-NOESY time courses for 1 are analyzed with the multiconforma tional analysis technique, conformer population analysis (CPA). Thus, experimental NOE data for a molecule that is known to adopt at least t hree conformational motifs are used to explore the factors influencing the structural characterization of conformationally supple molecules by NOE. Both the quantitative and qualitative interpretations of solut ion NOE data for the simple molecule, 1, are demonstrated to criticall y depend on the extent to which one relies on empirical force-field en ergetics to determine which structures are energetically viable and on the methods by which trial structures are generated. Other influences include the relative weighting of contributions to the fitting-error function by large vs small NOE cross peaks and inclusion vs exclusion of null data, i.e., whether the absence of NOE cross peaks is included in the fitting procedure. Factors that do not appear to exert signifi cant influence on the interpretation of these NOE data include (1) whe ther conformational interconversion is assumed to be slow or fast with respect to T-1, (2) the inclusion of diagonal cross-peak data in the fitting procedure, and (3) what structures are assumed in the calibrat ion of rotational correlation times from the observed data. (C) 1995 A cademic Press, Inc.