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Biophys J, August 1998, p. 635-640, Vol. 75, No. 2
Department of Crystallography, Birkbeck College, University of London, London WC1E 7HX, England
The conformation of the polypeptide antibiotic gramicidin
is greatly influenced by its environment. In methanol, it exists as an
equilibrium mixture of four interwound double-helical conformers that
differ in their handedness, chain orientation, and alignment. Upon the
addition of multivalent cationic salts, there is a shift in the
equilibrium to a single conformer, which was monitored in this study by
circular dichroism spectroscopy. With increasing concentrations of
multivalent cations, both the magnitude of the entire spectrum and the
ratio of the 229-nm to the 210-nm peak were increased. The spectral
change is not related to the charge on the cation, but appears to be
related to the cationic radius, with the maximum change in ellipticity
occurring for cations with a radius of ~1 Å. The effect requires the
presence of an anion whose radius is greater than that of a fluoride
ion, but is otherwise not a function of anion type. It is postulated
that multivalent cations interact with a binding site in one of the
conformers, known as species 1 (a left-handed, parallel, no stagger
double helix), stabilizing a modified form of this type of structure.
Biophys J, August 1998, p. 635-640, Vol. 75, No. 2
© 1998 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/98/08/635/06 $2.00
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