elastin and valyl-prolyl-glycyl-valyl-glycine

elastin has been researched along with valyl-prolyl-glycyl-valyl-glycine* in 9 studies

Other Studies

9 other study(ies) available for elastin and valyl-prolyl-glycyl-valyl-glycine

ArticleYear
LCST Behavior is Manifested in a Single Molecule: Elastin-Like polypeptide (VPGVG)n.
    Biomacromolecules, 2016, Jan-11, Volume: 17, Issue:1

    The physical origin of the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) behavior of a variety of fluids, including elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs), has been studied for the past few decades. As is the case for polymer solutions, LCST behavior of ELPs is invariably reported for large systems of molecules and is considered evidence for collective behavior. In contrast, we find evidence for properties changes associated with LCST behavior in a single molecule by performing long atomic-level molecular dynamics simulation on the ELP sequences (Val-Pro-Gly-Val-Gly)n for four different length peptides over a wide range of temperatures. We observe a sharp transition in the number of hydrogen bonds between peptide and water and in the number of water molecules within the first hydration shell as temperature rises; this is used to locate the transition temperature. The dependence of the transition temperatures of ELPs on their lengths agrees well with experiments in that both have the same power law exponents. Our simulations reveal that the tendency for pentamers (VPGVG) in ELPs of all lengths to lose H-bonds with water or to gain H-bonds with themselves as temperature rises is independent of the length of the chain in which they are embedded. Thus, the transition temperature of ELPs in pure water is determined by two factors: the hydrogen bonding tendency of the pentamers and the number of pentamers per ELP. Moreover, the hydrogen bonding tendency of pentamers depends only on their sequences, not on the ELP chain length.

    Topics: Cold Temperature; Elastin; Hydrogen Bonding; Oligopeptides; Peptides; Pharmaceutical Solutions; Transition Temperature; Water

2016
Molecular description of the LCST behavior of an elastin-like polypeptide.
    Biomacromolecules, 2014, Oct-13, Volume: 15, Issue:10

    Elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs) with the repeat sequence of VPGVG are widely used as a model system for investigation of lower critical solution temperature (LCST) transition behavior. In this paper, the effect of temperature on the structure, dynamics and association of (VPGVG)18 in aqueous solution is investigated using atomistic molecular dynamics simulations. Our simulations show that as the temperature increases the ELP backbones undergo gradual conformational changes, which are attributed to the formation of more ordered secondary structures such as β-strands. In addition, increasing temperature changes the hydrophobicity of the ELP by exposure of hydrophobic valine-side chains to the solvent and hiding of proline residues. Based on our simulations, we conclude that the transition behavior of (VPGVG)18 can be attributed to a combination of thermal disruption of the water network that surrounds the polypeptide, reduction of solvent accessible surface area of the polypeptide, and increase in its hydrophobicity. Simulations of the association of two (VPGVG)18 molecules demonstrated that the observed gradual changes in the structural properties of the single polypeptide chain are enough to cause the aggregation of polypeptides above the LCST. These results lead us to propose that the LCST phase behavior of poly(VPGVG) is a collective phenomenon that originates from the correlated gradual changes in single polypeptide structure and the abrupt change in properties of hydration water around the peptide and is a result of a competition between peptide-peptide and peptide-water interactions. This is a computational study of an important intrinsically disordered peptide system that provides an atomic-level description of structural features and interactions that are relevant in the LCST phase behavior.

    Topics: Cold Temperature; Elastin; Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions; Oligopeptides; Peptides; Protein Structure, Secondary; Solutions; Solvents; Transition Temperature; Water

2014
Thermal hysteresis in the backbone and side-chain dynamics of the elastin mimetic peptide [VPGVG]3 revealed by 2H NMR.
    The journal of physical chemistry. B, 2012, Jan-12, Volume: 116, Issue:1

    We report on experimental measurements of the backbone and side-chain dynamics of the elastin mimetic peptide [VPGVG](3) by (2)H NMR echo spectroscopy and 2D T(1)-T(2) correlation relaxometry. The T(1) and T(2) relaxation times of the Gly α-deuterons and Val α-, β-, and γ-deuterons of a hydrated sample reveal a thermal hysteresis when the temperature is raised from -10 to 45 °C and then subsequently cooled back to -10 °C. In addition, near 30 °C we observe a reduction in the slope of the T(1)(T) and T(2)(T) heating curves, indicating a structural change that appears to be correlated well to the known inverse temperature transition of this peptide. The thermal dependence of the correlation times of the Gly α-deuterons are well fit by an Arrhenius Law, from which we measured E(act) = (20.0 ± 3.1) kJ/mol when the sample is heated and E(act) = (10.9 ± 2.8) kJ/mol when cooled. Molecular dynamics simulations support the notion that the measured activation energy is determined largely by the extent of localized water, which is observed to decrease with increasing temperature from approximately 25 to 42 °C.

    Topics: Elastin; Molecular Dynamics Simulation; Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular; Oligopeptides; Phase Transition; Transition Temperature; Water

2012
NMR studies of localized water and protein backbone dynamics in mechanically strained elastin.
    The journal of physical chemistry. B, 2011, Dec-01, Volume: 115, Issue:47

    We report on measurements of the dynamics of localized waters of hydration and the protein backbone of elastin, a remarkable resilient protein found in vertebrate tissues, as a function of the applied external strain. Using deuterium 2D T(1)-T(2) NMR, we separate four reservoirs in the elastin-water system characterized by water with distinguishable mobilities. The measured correlation times corresponding to random tumbling of water localized to the protein is observed to decrease with increasing strain and is interpreted as an increase in its orientational entropy. The NMR T(1) and T(1ρ) relaxation times of the carbonyl and aliphatic carbons of the protein backbone are measured and indicate a reduction in the correlation time as the elastomer strain is increased. It is argued, and supported by MD simulation of a short model elastin peptide [VPGVG](3), that the observed changes in the backbone dynamics give rise to the development of an entropic elastomeric force that is responsible for elastins' remarkable elasticity.

    Topics: Deuterium; Elastin; Entropy; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Molecular Dynamics Simulation; Oligopeptides; Water

2011
Conformational dynamics of minimal elastin-like polypeptides: the role of proline revealed by molecular dynamics and nuclear magnetic resonance.
    Chemphyschem : a European journal of chemical physics and physical chemistry, 2008, Dec-22, Volume: 9, Issue:18

    Previous molecular dynamics studies of the elastin-like peptide (ELP) GVG(VPGVG) predict that this ELP undergoes a conformational transition from an open to a more compact closed state upon an increase in temperature. These structural changes occurring in this minimal elastin model at the so-called inverse temperature transition (ITT), which takes place when elastin is heated to temperatures of about 20-40 (omicron)C, are investigated further in this work by means of a combined theoretical and experimental approach. To do this, additional extensive classical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the capped octapeptide are carried out, analyzed, and compared to data obtained from homonuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy of the same octapeptide. Moreover, in the previous simulations, the proline residue in the ELP is found to act as a hinge, thereby allowing for the large-amplitude opening and closing conformational motion of the ITT. To explore the role of proline in such elastin repeating units, a point mutant (P5I), which replaces the proline residue with an isoleucine residue, is also investigated using the aforementioned theoretical and experimental techniques. The results show that the site-directed mutation completely alters the properties of this ELP, thus confirming the importance of the highly conserved proline residue in the ITT. Furthermore, a correlation between the two different methods employed is seen. Both methods predict the mutant ELP to be present in an unstructured form and the wild type ELP to have a beta-turn-like structure. Finally, the role of the peptidyl cis to trans isomerization of the proline hinge is assessed in detail.

    Topics: Computer Simulation; Elastin; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Motion; Mutagenesis, Site-Directed; Oligopeptides; Peptides; Proline; Protein Conformation; Transition Temperature

2008
Inverse temperature transition of a biomimetic elastin model: reactive flux analysis of folding/unfolding and its coupling to solvent dielectric relaxation.
    The journal of physical chemistry. B, 2006, Mar-02, Volume: 110, Issue:8

    The inverse temperature transition (ITT) of a biomimetic model for elastin, capped GVG(VPGVG) in liquid water, is investigated by a comprehensive classical molecular dynamics study. The temperature dependence of the solvation structure and dynamics of the octapeptide are compared using three common force fields, CHARMM, GROMOS, and OPLS. While these force fields differ in quantitative detail, they all predict this octapeptide to undergo a "folding transition" to closed conformations upon heating and a subsequent "unfolding transition" to open conformations at still higher temperatures, thus reproducing the ITT scenario. The peptide kinetics is analyzed within the reactive flux formalism applied to the largest-amplitude mode extracted from principal component analysis, and the solvent's dielectric fluctuations are obtained from the total water dipole autocorrelations. Most importantly, preliminary evidence for an intimate coupling of peptide folding/unfolding dynamics, and thus the ITT, and dielectric relaxation of bulk water is given, possibly being consistent with a "slave mode" picture.

    Topics: Biomimetic Materials; Computer Simulation; Elastin; Hydrogen Bonding; Models, Molecular; Oligopeptides; Phase Transition; Protein Conformation; Protein Folding; Solvents; Thermodynamics; Water

2006
Characterization of the temperature- and pressure-induced inverse and reentrant transition of the minimum elastin-like polypeptide GVG(VPGVG) by DSC, PPC, CD, and FT-IR spectroscopy.
    Biophysical journal, 2004, Volume: 86, Issue:3

    We investigated the temperature- and pressure-dependent structure and phase behavior of a solvated oligopeptide, GVG(VPGVG), which serves as a minimalistic elastin-like model system, over a large region of the thermodynamic phase field, ranging from 2 to 120 degrees C and from ambient pressure up to approximately 10 kbar, applying various spectroscopic (CD, FT-IR) and thermodynamic (DSC, PPC) measurements. We find that this octapeptide behaves as a two-state system which undergoes the well-known inverse-temperature folding transition occurring at T approximately 36 degrees C, and, in addition, a slow trend reversal at higher temperatures, finally leading to a reentrant unfolding close to the boiling point of water. Furthermore, the pressure-dependence of the folding/unfolding transition was studied to yield a more complete picture of the p, T-stability diagram of the system. A molecular-level picture of these processes, in particular on the role of water for the folding and unfolding events of the peptide, presented with the help of molecular-dynamics simulations, is presented in a companion article in this issue.

    Topics: Biomimetic Materials; Elastin; Energy Transfer; Materials Testing; Oligopeptides; Peptides; Phase Transition; Pressure; Protein Conformation; Protein Denaturation; Protein Folding; Protein Structure, Secondary; Temperature

2004
Temperature-dependent conformational transitions and hydrogen-bond dynamics of the elastin-like octapeptide GVG(VPGVG): a molecular-dynamics study.
    Biophysical journal, 2004, Volume: 86, Issue:3

    A joint experimental/theoretical investigation of the elastin-like octapeptide GVG(VPGVG) was carried out. In this article a comprehensive molecular-dynamics study of the temperature-dependent folding and unfolding of the octapeptide is presented. The current study, as well as its experimental counterpart (see companion article in this issue) find that this peptide undergoes an inverse temperature transition (ITT), leading to a folding at approximately 40-60 degrees C. In addition, an unfolding transition is identified at unusually high temperatures approaching the normal boiling point of water. Due to the small size of the system, two broad temperature regimes are found: the ITT regime at approximately 10-60 degrees C and the unfolding regime at approximately T > 60 degrees C, where the peptide has a maximum probability of being folded at T approximately 60 degrees C. A detailed molecular picture involving a thermodynamic order parameter, or reaction coordinate, for this process is presented along with a time-correlation function analysis of the hydrogen-bond dynamics within the peptide as well as between the peptide and solvating water molecules. Correlation with experimental evidence and ramifications on the properties of elastin are discussed.

    Topics: Biomimetic Materials; Computer Simulation; Elastin; Energy Transfer; Hydrogen Bonding; Materials Testing; Models, Chemical; Models, Molecular; Oligopeptides; Peptides; Phase Transition; Principal Component Analysis; Protein Conformation; Protein Denaturation; Protein Folding; Protein Structure, Secondary; Temperature

2004
Stimulation of cell proliferation and autoregulation of elastin expression by elastin peptide VPGVG in cultured chick vascular smooth muscle cells.
    FEBS letters, 1995, Jul-17, Volume: 368, Issue:2

    Synthetic elastin peptides, VPGVG or its polymer (VPGVG)n, enhanced the proliferation of smooth muscle cells 1.5-fold during 48 h treatment at the concentrations over 10(-6) M or 1.0 microgram/ml, respectively. Monomeric and polymeric VPGVG sequences reduced elastin synthesis and its mRNA level to one-third and one-half of control respectively under the conditions in which the proliferation of cells were enhanced, but did not change collagen synthesis as measured by bacterial collagenase digestion. The elastin-specific autoregulation by elastin fragments may reflect the feedback regulation of elastin expression which may play an essential role in elastin metabolism under the normal and diseased conditions.

    Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Cell Division; Cells, Cultured; Chickens; Collagen; Elastin; Homeostasis; Molecular Sequence Data; Muscle, Smooth, Vascular; Oligopeptides; RNA, Messenger

1995