Structure of an isolated gramicidin A double helical species by high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance.
A conformational species of gramicidin A has been isolated in dioxane by high pressure liquid chromatography and characterized by circular dichroism and two-dimensional proton nuclear magnetic resonance. Double-quantum filtered two-dimensional correlation spectroscopy, two-dimensional homonuclear Hartman Hahn spectroscopy and two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect spectra at 500 MHz were used to obtain virtually complete proton assignments and produce 192 distance constraints. Protocols to determine the state of aggregation, monomer-specific assignment of nuclear Overhauser enhancement values, hydrogen bonding pattern and helix handedness are described. A distance geometry/simulated annealing routine was used to generate well-defined backbone and side-chain structures. The species isolated is a right-handed intertwined double helix, with approximately 5.7 residues per turn. Unique values for helical dimensions are also specified.[1]References
- Structure of an isolated gramicidin A double helical species by high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance. Pascal, S.M., Cross, T.A. J. Mol. Biol. (1992) [Pubmed]
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