Backbone structure confirmation and side chain conformation refinement of a bradykinin mimic BKM-824 by comparing calculated H-1, C-13 and F-19 chemical shifts with experiment

by Wang, B.; Miskolzie, M.; Kotovych, G.; Pulay, P.

Calculated and experimental H-1, C-13 and F-19 chemical shifts were compared in BKM-824, a cyclic bradykinin antagonist mimic, c[Ava(1)-Igl(2)-Ser(3)-DF5F(4)-Oic(5)-Arg(6)] (Ava=5-aminovaleric acid, Igl=alpha-(2-indanyl)glycine, DF5F=pentafluorophenylalanine, Oic=(2S,3aS,7aS)-octahydroindole-2-carboxylic acid). The conformation of BKM-824 has been studied earlier by NMR spectroscopy, (M. Miskolzie et al., J. Biomolec. Struct. Dyn. 17, 947-955 (2000)). All NMR structures have qualitatively the same backbone structure but there is considerable variation in the side chain conformations. We have carried out quantum mechanical optimization for three representative NMR structures at the B3LYP/6-31G* level, constraining the backbone dihedral angles at their NMR structure values, followed by NMR chemical shift calculations at the optimized structures with the 6-311G** basis set. There is an intramolecular hydrogen bond at Ser(3) in the optimized structures. The experimental C-13 chemical shifts at five C-alpha positions as well as at the C-beta, C-gamma and C-delta position of Ava(1), which forms part of the backbone, are well reproduced by the calculations, confirming the NMR backbone structure. A comparison between the calculated and experimental H-beta chemical shifts in Igl(2) shows that the dominant conformation at this residue is gauche. Changes of proton chemical shifts with the scan of the chi(1) angle in DF5F(4) Suggest that chi(1) =180degrees. The calculated H-1 and C-13 chemical shifts are in good agreement with experiment at the rigid residue Oic(5). None of the models gives accurate results for Arg(6), presumably because of its positive charge. Our study indicates that calculated NMR shifts can be used as additional constraints in conjunction with NMR data to determine protein conformations. However, to be computationally effective, a database of chemical shifts in small peptide fragments should be precalculated.

Journal
Journal of Biomolecular Structure and Dynamics
Volume
20
Issue
1
Year
2002
Start Page
71-79
URL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07391102.2002.10506823
ISBN/ISSN
1538-0254; 0739-1102
DOI
10.1080/07391102.2002.10506823