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American Chemical Society, Journal of Physical Chemistry B (Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysical Chemistry), 43(112), p. 13661-13669, 2008

DOI: 10.1021/jp806465e

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Factors Governing Electron Capture by Small Disulfide Loops in Two-Cysteine Peptides

Journal article published in 2008 by Élise Dumont ORCID, Pierre-François Loos, Xavier Assfeld ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Integrated molecular orbital−molecular orbital (IMOMO) calculations on 17 short disulfide-bridged peptides (up to 16 residues, with at most five intraloop residues) were performed to elucidate some factors controlling their electron capture. These illustrative systems display contrasted behaviors, shedding light on several criteria of differentiation: size, shape, and rigidity of the disulfide-linking loop, intramolecular hydrogen bonds, etc. The geometrical malleability of disulfide radical anions, whose existence and role as intermediate have been evidenced, is discussed. The disulfide elongation (by ca. 0.7 Å) upon electron capture induces “soft” structural damages for these turn structures, with a weakening or cleavage of vicinal hydrogen bond(s). On the basis of a series of six Cys-Alan-Cys peptides, it is proposed that electron affinity reflects the topological frustration of these short and highly constrained structures. Results for a series of amino acid mutations are analyzed for the Cys-Xxx-Yyy-Cys motif, common to redox enzymes of the thioredoxin superfamily.