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    J Biol Chem. 2007 Aug 3;282(31):22699-706. Epub 2007 Jun 4.

    NMR shows hydrophobic interactions replace glycine packing in the triple helix at a natural break in the (Gly-X-Y)n repeat.

    Source

    Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, BIOMAPS Institute, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854, USA.

    Abstract

    Little is known about the structural consequences of the more than 20 breaks in the (Gly-X-Y)(n) repeating sequence found in the long triple helix domain of basement membrane type IV collagen. NMR triple resonance studies of doubly labeled residues within a set of collagen model peptides provide distance and dihedral angle restraints that allow determination of model structures of both a standard triple helix and of a triple helix with a break in solution. Although the standard triple helix cannot continue when Gly is not every third residue, the NMR data support rod-like molecules that have standard triple-helical structures on both sides of a well defined and highly localized perturbation. The GAAVM break region may be described as a "pseudo triple helix," because it preserves the standard one-residue stagger of the triple helix but introduces hydrophobic interactions at the position normally occupied by the much smaller and hydrogen-bonded Gly residue of the repeating (Gly-X-Y)(n) sequence. This structure provides a rationale for the consensus presence of hydrophobic residues in breaks of similar length and defines a novel variant of a triple helix that could be involved in recognition.

    PMID:
    17550894
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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