Jsw. Holtz et al., Ultraviolet raman examination of the environmental dependence of bombolitin I and bombolitin III secondary structure, BIOPHYS J, 76(6), 1999, pp. 3227-3234
Bombolitin I and III (BI and Bill) are small amphiphilic peptides isolated
from bumblebee venom. Although they exist in predominately nonhelical confo
rmations in dilute aqueous solutions, we demonstrate, using UV Raman spectr
oscopy, that they become predominately alpha-helical in solution at pH > 10
, in high ionic strength solutions, and in the presence of trifluoroethanol
(TFE) and dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) micelles, In this paper, we examine
the effects of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions that control fold
ing of BI and BIII by systematically monitoring their secondary structures
as a function of solution conditions. We determine the BI and Bill secondar
y structure contents by using the quantitative UV Raman methodology of Chi
et al. (1998. Biochemistry. 37:2854-2864), Our findings suggest that the cr
-helix turn in Bill at neutral pH is stabilized by a salt bridge between re
sidues Asp(2) and Lys(5). This initial alpha-helical turn results in differ
ent BI and Bill alpha-helical folding mechanisms observed in high pH and hi
gh salt concentrations: Bill folds from its single alpha-helix turn close t
o its N-terminal, whereas the BI alpha-helix probably nucleates within the
C-terminal half. We also used quasielastic light scattering to demonstrate
that the BI and BIII alpha-helix formation in 0.2 M Ca(ClO4)(2) is accompan
ied by formation of trimers acid hexamers, respectively.