Solid‐state nmr spectroscopy provides a robust method for investigating polypeptides that have been prepared by chemical synthesis and that are immobilized by strong interactions with solid surfaces or large macroscopic complexes. Solid‐state nmr spectroscopy has been widely used to investigate membrane polypeptides or peptide aggregates such as amyloid fibrils. Whereas magic angle spinning solid‐state nmr spectroscopy allows one to measure distances and dihedral angles with high accuracy, static membrane samples that are aligned with respect to the magnetic field direction allow one to determine the secondary structure of bound polypeptides and their orientation with respect to the bilayer normal. Peptide dynamics and the effect of polypeptides on the macroscopic phase preference of phospholipid membranes have been investigated in nonoriented samples. Investigations of the structure and topology of membrane channels, peptide antibiotics, signal sequences as well as model systems that allow one to dissect the interaction contributions in phospholipid membranes will be presented in greater detail. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Biopoly 51: 174–190, 1999
The structure of the membrane anchor domain (VpuMA) of the HIV-1-specific accessory protein Vpu has been investigated in solution and in lipid bilayers by homonuclear two-dimensional and solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, respectively. Simulated annealing calculations, using the nuclear Overhauser enhancement data for the soluble synthetic peptide Vpu1-39 (positions Met-1-Asp-39) in an aqueous 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol (TFE) solution, afford a compact well-defined U-shaped structure comprised of an initial turn (residues 1-6) followed by a linker (7-9) and a short helix on the N-terminal side (10-16) and a further longer helix on the C-terminal side (22-36). The side chains of the two aromatic residues (Trp-22 and Tyr-29) in the longer helix are directed toward the center of the molecule around which the hydrophobic core of the folded VpuMA is positioned. As the observed solution structure is inconsistent with the formation of ion-conductive membrane pores defined previously for VpuMA in planar lipid bilayers, the isolated VpuMA domain as peptide Vpu1-27 was investigated in oriented phospholipid bilayers by proton-decoupled 15N cross polarization solid-state NMR spectroscopy. The line widths and chemical shift data of three selectively 15N-labeled peptides are consistent with a transmembrane alignment of a helical polypeptide. Chemical shift tensor calculations imply that the data sets are compatible with a model in which the nascent helices of the folded solution structure reassemble to form a more regular linear alpha-helix that lies parallel to the bilayer normal with a tilt angle of =30 degrees. The arrangement of the membrane-associated structures described previously for the cytoplasmic domain and for the anchor domain of Vpu identified in this work is discussed.
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