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1.
The high-resolution structure of membrane proteins is notoriously difficult to determine due to the hydrophobic nature of the protein-membrane complexes. Solid-state NMR spectroscopy is a unique and powerful atomic-resolution probe of the structure and dynamics of these important biological molecules. A number of new solid-state NMR methods for determining the depth of insertion, orientation, oligomeric structure, and long-range (10-15 A) distances of membrane proteins are summarized. Membrane protein depths can now be determined using several complementary techniques with varying site-specificity, distance precision, and mobility requirement on the protein. Membrane protein orientation can now be determined with or without macroscopic alignment, the latter providing a novel alternative for orientation determination of intrinsically curvature-inducing proteins. The novel analyses of beta-sheet membrane protein orientation are described. The quaternary structure of membrane peptide assemblies can now be elucidated using a 19F spin diffusion technique that simultaneously yields the oligomeric number and intermolecular distances up to 15 A. Finally, long-range distances up to approximately 10 A can now be measured using 1H spins with an accuracy of better than 1 A. These methods are demonstrated on several beta-sheet membrane peptides with antimicrobial activities and on two alpha-helical ion-channel proteins. Finally, we show that the nearly ubiquitous dynamics of membrane proteins can be readily examined using 2D correlation experiments. An intimate appreciation of molecular motion in these systems not only leads to important insights into the specific function of these membrane proteins but also may be exploited for other purposes such as orientation determination.  相似文献   

2.
Determination of the high-resolution quaternary structure of oligomeric membrane proteins requires knowledge of both the oligomeric number and intermolecular distances. The centerband-only detection of exchange (CODEX) technique has been shown to enable the extraction of the oligomeric number through the equilibrium exchange intensity at long mixing times. To obtain quantitative distances, we now provide an analysis of the mixing-time-dependent CODEX intensities using the 1H-driven spin diffusion theory. The exchange curve is fit to a rate equation, where the rate constants are proportional to the square of the dipolar coupling and the spectral overlap integral between the exchanging spins. Using a number of 13C- and 19F-labeled crystalline model compounds with known intermolecular distances, we empirically determined the overlap integrals of 13C and 19F CODEX for specific spinning speeds and chemical shift anisotropies. These consensus overlap integral values can be applied to structurally unknown systems to determine distances. Applying the 19F CODEX experiment and analysis, we studied the transmembrane peptide of the M2 protein (M2TMP) of influenza A virus bound to 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine bilayers. The experiment proved for the first time that M2TMP associates as tetramers in lipid bilayers, similar to its oligomeric state in detergent micelles. Moreover, the nearest-neighbor interhelical F-F distance between (4-19F)Phe30 is 7.9-9.5 angstroms. This distance constrains the orientation and the packing of the helices in the tetrameric bundle and supports the structural model derived from previous solid-state NMR 15N orientational data. Thus, the CODEX technique presents a general method for determining the oligomeric number and intermolecular distances in the approximately 10 angstroms range in membrane proteins and other complex biological assemblies.  相似文献   

3.
The M2 transmembrane peptide (M2TMP) of the influenza A virus forms a tetrameric helical bundle that acts as a proton-selective channel important in the viral life cycle. The side-chain conformation of the peptide is largely unknown and is important for elucidating the proton-conducting mechanism and the channel stability. Using a 19F spin diffusion NMR technique called CODEX, we have measured the oligomeric states and interhelical side chain-side chain 19F-19F distances at several residues using singly fluorinated M2TMP bound to DMPC bilayers. 19F CODEX data at a key residue of the proton channel, Trp41, confirm the tetrameric state of the peptide and yield a nearest-neighbor interhelical distance of approximately 11 A under both neutral and acidic pH. Since the helix orientation is precisely known from previous 15N NMR experiments and the backbone channel diameter has a narrow allowed range, this 19F distance constrains the Trp41 side-chain conformation to t90 (chi1 approximately 180 degrees , chi2 approximately 90 degrees ). This Trp41 rotamer, combined with a previously measured 15N-13C distance between His37 and Trp411, suggests that the His37 rotamer is t-160. The implication of the proposed (His37, Trp41) rotamers to the gating mechanism of the M2 proton channel is discussed. Binding of the antiviral drug amantadine to the peptide does not affect the F-F distance at Trp41. Interhelical 19F-19F distances are also measured at residues 27 and 38, each mutated to 4-19F-Phe. For V27F-M2TMP, the 19F-19F distances suggest a mixture of dimers and tetramers, whereas the L38F-M2TMP data indicate two tetramers of different sizes, suggesting side chain conformational heterogeneity at this lipid-facing residue. This work shows that 19F spin diffusion NMR is a valuable tool for determining long-range intermolecular distances that shed light on the mechanism of action and conformational heterogeneity of membrane protein oligomers.  相似文献   

4.
Solid state NMR spectroscopy is inherently sensitive to chemical structure and composition and thus makes an ideal method to probe the heterogeneity of multicomponent polymers. Specifically, NMR spin diffusion experiments can be used to extract reliable information about spatial domain sizes on multiple length scales, provided that magnetization selection of one domain can be achieved. In this paper, we demonstrate the preferential filtering of protons in fluorinated domains during NMR spin diffusion experiments using 1H‐19F heteronuclear dipolar dephasing based on rotational echo double resonance (REDOR) MAS NMR techniques. Three pulse sequence variations are demonstrated based on the different nuclei detected: direct 1H detection, plus both 1H?13C cross polarization and 1H?19F cross polarization detection schemes. This 1H‐19F REDOR‐filtered spin diffusion method was used to measure fluorinated domain sizes for a complex polymer blend. The efficacy of the REDOR‐based spin filter does not rely on spin relaxation behavior or chemical shift differences and thus is applicable for performing NMR spin diffusion experiments in samples where traditional magnetization filters may prove unsuccessful. This REDOR‐filtered NMR spin diffusion method can also be extended to other samples where a heteronuclear spin pair exists that is unique to the domain of interest.  相似文献   

5.
A conformationally restricted monofluorinated α‐amino acid, (3‐fluorobicyclo[1.1.1]pentyl)glycine (F‐Bpg), was designed as a label for the structural analysis of membrane‐bound peptides by solid‐state 19F NMR spectroscopy. The compound was synthesized and validated as a 19F label for replacing natural aliphatic α‐amino acids. Calculations suggested that F‐Bpg is similar to Leu/Ile in terms of size and lipophilicity. The 19F NMR label was incorporated into the membrane‐active antimicrobial peptide PGLa and provided information on the structure of the peptide in a lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

6.
A conformationally restricted monofluorinated α‐amino acid, (3‐fluorobicyclo[1.1.1]pentyl)glycine (F‐Bpg), was designed as a label for the structural analysis of membrane‐bound peptides by solid‐state 19F NMR spectroscopy. The compound was synthesized and validated as a 19F label for replacing natural aliphatic α‐amino acids. Calculations suggested that F‐Bpg is similar to Leu/Ile in terms of size and lipophilicity. The 19F NMR label was incorporated into the membrane‐active antimicrobial peptide PGLa and provided information on the structure of the peptide in a lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

7.
The cationic peptide [KIGAKI](3) was designed as an amphiphilic β-strand and serves as a model for β-sheet aggregation in membranes. Here, we have characterized its molecular conformation, membrane alignment, and dynamic behavior using solid-state (19)F NMR. A detailed structure analysis of selectively (19)F-labeled peptides was carried out in oriented DMPC bilayers. It showed a concentration-dependent transition from monomeric β-strands to oligomeric β-sheets. In both states, the rigid (19)F-labeled side chains project straight into the lipid bilayer but they experience very different mobilities. At low peptide-to-lipid ratios ≤1:400, monomeric [KIGAKI](3) swims around freely on the membrane surface and undergoes considerable motional averaging, with essentially uncoupled φ/ψ torsion angles. The flexibility of the peptide backbone in this 2D plane is reminiscent of intrinsically unstructured proteins in 3D. At high concentrations, [KIGAKI](3) self-assembles into immobilized β-sheets, which are untwisted and lie flat on the membrane surface as amyloid-like fibrils. This is the first time the transition of monomeric β-strands into oligomeric β-sheets has been characterized by solid-state NMR in lipid bilayers. It promises to be a valuable approach for studying membrane-induced amyloid formation of many other, clinically relevant peptide systems.  相似文献   

8.
The Replica Exchange Statistical Temperature Molecular Dynamics algorithm is used to study the equilibrium properties of a peptide monomer and dimer and the thermodynamics of peptide dimer formation. The simulation data are analyzed by the Statistical Temperature Weighted Histogram Analysis Method. Each 10-residue peptide is represented by a coarse-grained model with hydrophobic side chains and has an α-helix as its minimum energy configuration. It is shown that the configurational behavior of the dimer can be divided into four regions as the temperature increases: two folded peptides; one folded and one unfolded peptide; two unfolded peptides; and two spatially separated peptides. Two important phenomena are discussed: in the dimer, one peptide unfolds at a lower temperature than the isolated monomer and the other peptide unfolds at a higher temperature than the isolated monomer. In addition, in the temperature region where one peptide is folded and the other unfolded, the unfolded peptide adopts an extended structure that minimizes the overall surface area of the aggregate. It is suggested that combination of destabilization due to aggregation and the resulting extended configuration of the destabilized peptide could have implications for nucleating β-sheet structures and the ultimate formation of fibrils.  相似文献   

9.
The aggregation and packing of a membrane-disruptive beta-hairpin antimicrobial peptide, protegrin-1 (PG-1), in the solid state are investigated to understand its oligomerization and hydrogen-bonding propensity. Incubation of PG-1 in phosphate buffer saline produced well-ordered nanometer-scale aggregates, as indicated by 13C and 15N NMR line widths, chemical shifts, and electron microscopy. Two-dimensional 13C and 1H spin diffusion experiments using C-terminus strand and N-terminus strand labeled peptides indicate that the beta-hairpin molecules in these ordered aggregates are oriented parallel to each other with like strands lining the intermolecular interface. In comparison, disordered and lyophilized peptide samples are randomly packed with both parallel and antiparallel alignments. The PG-1 aggregates show significant immobilization of the Phe ring near the beta-turn, further supporting the structural ordering. The intermolecular packing of PG-1 found in the solid state is consistent with its oligomerization in lipid bilayers. This solid-state aggregation approach may be useful for determining the quaternary structure of peptides in general and for gaining insights into the oligomerization of antimicrobial peptides in lipid bilayers in particular.  相似文献   

10.
The X band PELDOR spectroscopy was used to investigate the magnetic dipole-dipole interactions in glassy solutions of nitroxide mono-labeled tylopeptin B and heptaibin peptaibiotics at 77 K. Specifically, a study was performed of the tylopeptin B peptides labeled at either position 3, 8, or 13, denoted as T3, T8, and T13, respectively. The heptaibin analogs labeled at either position 2 or 14, denoted as H2 and H14, respectively, were also investigated. It was shown that in frozen glassy peptide solutions in methanol, the spin labels are randomly distributed over the solvent volume. This result points to the absence of specific dipolar interactions between the peptides under these conditions. However, peptide aggregation was detected in weakly polar methanol/toluene environments. To study the properties of the resulting aggregates, we examined the depth of modulation for the PELDOR traces as a function of the concentration of the peptides in solution and the distances between the spin labels in the aggregates. Based on the concentration dependencies, the number of peptide molecules in the aggregates was estimated. We find that this value ranges from 2 to 3, depending on the position of the spin label in the peptide sequence. The combined analysis of the distance spectra and the number of peptide molecules in the aggregates allows us to suggest that dimer formation is the prevailing mode of self-association. In the case of spin-labeled tylopeptin B, the molecules in the dimer are head-to-head oriented. In addition, the distance spectra of the aggregates show that the C-termini of the molecules in the tylopeptin B dimer are more mobile than the Ntermini. This phenomenon leads to an increase in the spread of the distances between the nitroxides as the label position is approaching the peptide C-terminus. For heptaibin, we show that two forms of dimerization (head-to-head and head-to-tail) occur. Finally, in addition to dimers, aggregates containing 3 or 4 peptide molecules, which give broad lines in the distance spectra, are seen in solution.  相似文献   

11.
The insertion of charged amino acid residues into the hydrophobic part of lipid bilayers is energetically unfavorable yet found in many cationic membrane peptides and protein domains. To understand the mechanism of this translocation, we measured the (13)C-(31)P distances for an Arg-rich beta-hairpin antimicrobial peptide, PG-1, in the lipid membrane using solid-state NMR. Four residues, including two Arg's, scattered through the peptide were chosen for the distance measurements. Surprisingly, all residues show short distances to the lipid (31)P: 4.0-6.5 A in anionic POPE/POPG membranes and 6.5-8.0 A in zwitterionic POPC membranes. The shortest distance of 4.0 A, found for a guanidinium Czeta at the beta-turn, suggests N-H...O-P hydrogen bond formation. Torsion angle measurements of the two Arg's quantitatively confirm that the peptide adopts a beta-hairpin conformation in the lipid bilayer, and gel-phase 1H spin diffusion from water to the peptide indicates that PG-1 remains transmembrane in the gel phase of the membrane. For this transmembrane beta-hairpin peptide to have short (13)C-(31)P distances for multiple residues in the molecule, some phosphate groups must be embedded in the hydrophobic part of the membrane, with the local (31)P plane parallel to the beta-strand. This provides direct evidence for toroidal pores, where some lipid molecules change their orientation to merge the two monolayers. We propose that the driving force for this toroidal pore formation is guanidinium-phosphate complexation, where the cationic Arg residues drag the anionic phosphate groups along as they insert into the hydrophobic part of the membrane. This phosphate-mediated translocation of guanidinium ions may underlie the activity of other Arg-rich antimocrobial peptides and may be common among cationic membrane proteins.  相似文献   

12.
Conformationally constrained non‐racemizing trifluoromethyl‐substituted lysine isosteres [(E)‐ and (Z)‐TCBLys] with charged side chains are presented as a new type of 19F‐NMR labels for peptide studies. Design of the labels, their synthesis, incorporation into peptides and experimental demonstration of their application for solid state NMR studies of membrane‐active peptides are described. A series of fluorine‐labeled analogues of the helical amphipathic antimicrobial peptide PGLa(Nle) was obtained, in which different lysine residues in the original peptide sequence were replaced, one at a time, by either (E)‐ or (Z)‐TCBLys. Antimicrobial activities of the synthesized analogues were practically the same as those of the parent peptide. The structural and orientational parameters of the helical PGLa(Nle) peptide in model bilayers, as determined using the novel labels confirmed and refined the previously known structure. (E)‐ and (Z)‐TCBLys, as a set of cationic 19F‐NMR labels, were shown to deliver structural information about the charged face of amphipathic peptides by solid state 19F‐NMR, previously inaccessible by this method.  相似文献   

13.
This opinion is focused on the electrochemistry of peptides utilised in biological and technological processes. The redox behaviour of peptides important in biomedicine, neuropeptides and antimicrobial peptides is highlighted. In addition to peptides composed of essential amino acids, peptide-mimetic molecules such as peptide nucleic acid and artificial peptidic wires transferring protons and electrons are reviewed. The application of electrochemistry for the research of peptide–membrane and peptide–surface interactions is also discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Noncovalent peptide-peptide and peptide-water interactions in small model systems were examined using an electrospray mass spectrometer equipped with a high-pressure drift cell. The results of these aggregation and hydration experiments were interpreted with the aid of molecular mechanics (MM) and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The systems investigated include bare deprotonated monomers and dimers [P(1,2)-H](-) and hydrated deprotonated monomers and dimers [P(1,2)-H](-).(H(2)O)(n)() for the peptides dialanine (P = AA) and diglycine (P = GG). Mass spectra indicated that both peptides AA and GG form exclusively dimer ions in the electrospray process. Monomeric ions were generated by high-energy injection of the dimers into the drift cell. Temperature-dependent hydration equilibrium experiments carried out in the drift cell yielded water binding energies ranging from 11.7 (first water molecule) to 7.1 kcal/mol (fourth water) for [AA-H](-) and 11.0 to 7.4 kcal/mol for [GG-H](-). The first water molecule adding to the dimer ions [AA-H](-).(AA) and [GG-H](-).(GG) is bound by 8.4 and 7.5 kcal/mol, respectively. The hydration mass spectra for the monomers and dimers provide a means to compare the ability of water and a neutral peptide to solvate a deprotonated peptide [P-H](-). The data indicate that a similar degree of solvation is achieved by four water molecules, [P-H](-).(H(2)O)(4), or one neutral peptide, [P-H](-).(P). Temperature-dependent kinetics experiments yielded activation energies for dissociation of the dimers [AA-H](-).(AA) and [GG-H](-).(GG) of 34.9 and 32.2 kcal/mol, respectively. MM and DFT calculations carried out for the dialanine system indicated that the dimer binding energy is 24.3 kcal/mol, when the [AA-H](-) and AA products are relaxed to their global minimum structures. However, a value of 38.9 kcal/mol is obtained if [AA-H](-) and AA dissociate but retain the structures of the moieties in the dimer, suggesting the transition state occurs early in the dissociation process. Similar results were found for the diglycine dimer.  相似文献   

15.
Hydration of small peptides   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The results for the sequential hydration of small peptides (<15 residues) obtained in our group are reviewed and put in perspective with other work published in the literature where appropriate. Our findings are based on hydration equilibrium measurements in a high-pressure drift cell inserted into an electrospray mass spectrometer and on calculations employing molecular mechanics and density functional theory methods. It is found that the ionic functional groups typically present in peptides, the ammonium, guanidinium, and carboxylate groups, are the primary target of water molecules binding to peptides. Whereas the water–guanidinium binding energy is fairly constant at 9 ± 1 kcal/mol, the water binding energy of an ammonium group ranges from 7 to 15 kcal/mol depending on how exposed the ammonium group is. A five-residue peptide containing an ammonium group is in favorable cases large enough to fully self-solvate the charge, but a pentapeptide containing a guanidinium group is too small to efficiently shield the charge of this much larger ionic group. The water–carboxylate interaction amounts to 13 kcal/mol with smaller values for a shielded carboxylate group. Both water bound to water in a second solvation shell and charge remote water molecules on the surface of the peptide are bound by 7–8 kcal/mol. The presence of several ionic groups in multiply charged peptides increases the number of favorable hydration sites, but does not enhance the water–peptide binding energy significantly. Water binding energies measured for the first four water molecules bound to protonated bradykinin do not show the declining trend typically observed for other peptides but are constant at 10 kcal/mol, a result consistent with a molecule containing a salt bridge with several good hydration sites. Questions regarding peptide structural changes as a function of number of solvating water molecules are discussed. Not much is known at present about the effect of individual water molecules on the conformation of peptides and on the stability of peptide zwitterions.  相似文献   

16.
The increasing antimicrobial-resistant prevalence has become a severe health problem. It has led to the invention of a new antimicrobial agent such as antimicrobial peptides. Heteroscorpine-1 is an antimicrobial peptide that has the ability to kill many bacterial strains. It consists of 76 amino acid residues with a cecropin-like region in N-terminal and a defensin-like region in the C-terminal. The cecropin-like region from heteroscorpine-1 (CeHS-1) is similar to cecropin B, but it lost its glycine-proline hinge region. The bioinformatics prediction was used to help the designing of mutant peptides. The addition of glycine-proline hinge and positively charged amino acids, the deletion of negatively charged amino acids, and the optimization of the hydrophobicity of the peptide resulted in two mutant peptides, namely, CeHS-1 GP and CeHS-1 GPK. The new mutant peptide showed higher antimicrobial activity than the native peptide without increasing toxicity. The interaction of the peptides with the membrane showed that the peptides were capable of disrupting both the inner and outer bacterial cell membrane. Furthermore, the SEM analysis showed that the peptides created the pore in the bacterial cell membrane resulted in cell membrane disruption. In conclusion, the mutants of CeHS-1 had the potential to develop as novel antimicrobial peptides.  相似文献   

17.
The new technique of pulsed electron-electron double resonance in electron spin-echo (PELDOR) in combination with the CW-ESR method has been used to investigate the secondary structure of a double spin-labeled peptide (the [TOAC-1,8]-analogue of the peptaibol antibiotic trichogin GA IV) that is hidden into a tetrameric supramolecular assembly of unlabeled peptide molecules. The magnetic dipole-dipole relaxation of spin labels has been experimentally studied in glassy solutions of the double-labeled peptide frozen to 77 K in a mixture of chloroform-toluene with an excess of unlabeled peptide. The PELDOR signal oscillations have been observed at high degrees of dilution with unlabeled peptide. The intramolecular distance between the spin labels of the peptide molecule in the aggregate has been determined from the oscillation frequency to be 15.7 A which is close to the value of (approximately equal to) 14 A calculated for a 3(10)-helical structure. Estimation of the fraction of this ordered secondary structure shows that about 19% of the peptide molecules in aggregates are folded in the 3(10)-helical conformation. The present experimental results are consistent with our molecular model presented in J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2000, 122, 3843-3848, wherein four amphiphilic 3(10)-helical peptide molecules form a vesicular system with the polar amino acid side chains pointing to the interior, and the apolar side chains, to the exterior of the cluster. The experimental data were compared with the results obtained with other techniques.  相似文献   

18.
R(f)-PEG (fluoroalkyl double-ended poly(ethylene glycol)) hydrogel is potentially useful as a drug delivery depot due to its advanced properties of sol-gel two-phase coexistence and low surface erosion. In this study, (1)H molecular diffusion nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and (19)F spin diffusion NMR were used to probe the drug loading and diffusion properties of the R(f)-PEG hydrogel for small anticancer drugs, 5-fluorouracil (FU) and its hydrophobic analog, 1,3-dimethyl-5-fluorouracil (DMFU). It was found that FU has a larger apparent diffusion coefficient than that of DMFU, and the diffusion of the latter was more hindered. The result of (19)F spin diffusion NMR for the corresponding freeze-dried samples indicates that a larger portion of DMFU resided in the R(f) core/IPDU intermediate-layer region (where IPDU refers to isophorone diurethane, as a linker to interconnect the R(f) group and the PEG chain) than that of FU while the opposite is true in the PEG-water phase. To understand the experimental data, a diffusion model was proposed to include: (1) hindered diffusion of the drug molecules in the R(f) core/IPDU-intermediate-layer region; (2) relatively free diffusion of the drug molecules in the PEG-water phase (or region); and (3) diffusive exchange of the probe molecules between the above two regions. This study also shows that molecular diffusion NMR combined with spin diffusion NMR is useful in studying the drug loading and diffusion properties in hydrogels for the purpose of drug delivery applications.  相似文献   

19.
Using two series of de novo designed antimicrobial peptides,we studied the effects of peptide length and hydrophobicity/charge(H/C) ratio on the antimicrobial activities.For these peptides,a correlation was established between their antimicrobial efficacy and the leakage,aggregation,and fusion activities on artificial membrane.The results showed that peptides with an H/C ratio of 1.3,and a length of about half of the membrane thickness caused most potent membrane leakage,and negligible membrane aggregation and fusion.In addition,such peptide also exhibited the highest antimicrobial activity.Analysis of the hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions showed that the strength,the order and the position of these interactions determined the activities of the peptides on the artificial membrane and thus the antimicrobial efficacy.Further analyses on the tilt angle of the peptides on the membrane surface indicated that the peptides distorted the membrane in a dynamic mode,instead of being fixed in the membrane at a constant angle.  相似文献   

20.
The sequential addition of water molecules to a series of small protonated peptides was studied by equilibrium experiments using electrospray ionization combined with drift cell techniques. The experimental data were compared to theoretical structures of selected hydrated species obtained by molecular mechanics simulations. The sequential water binding energies were measured to be of the order of 7-15 kcal/mol, with the largest values for the first water molecule adding to either a small nonarginine containing peptide (e.g., protonated dialanine) or to a larger peptide in a high charge state (e.g., triply protonated neurotensin). General trends are (a) that the first water molecules are more strongly bound than the following water molecules, (b) that very small peptides (2-3 residues) bind the first few water molecules more strongly than larger peptides, (c) that the first few water molecules bind more strongly to higher charge states than to lower charge states, and (d) that water binds less strongly to a protonated guanidino group (arginine containing peptides) than to a protonated amino group. Experimental differential entropies of hydration were found to be of the order of -20 cal/mol/K although values vary from system to system. At constant experimental conditions the number of water molecules adding to any peptide ion is strongly dependent on the peptide charge state (with higher charge states adding proportionally more water molecules) and only weakly dependent on the choice of peptide. For small peptides molecular mechanics calculations indicate that the first few water molecules add preferentially to the site of protonation until a complete solvation shell is formed around the charge. Subsequent water molecules add either to water molecules of the first solvation shell or add to charge remote functional groups of the peptide. In larger peptides, charge remote sites generally compete more effectively with charge proximate sites even for the first few water molecules.  相似文献   

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