Stimulus-Induced Relief of Intentionally Incorporated Frustration Drives Refolding of a Water-Soluble Biomimetic Foldamer

Frustrated, or nonoptimal, interactions have been proposed to be essential to a protein’s ability to display responsive behavior such as allostery, conformational signaling, and signal transduction. However, the intentional incorporation of frustrated noncovalent interactions has not been explored a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2023-12, Vol.145 (50), p.27672-27679
Hauptverfasser: Henriksen, Hanne C., Sowers, Adam J., Travis, Christopher R., Vulpis, Troy D., Cope, Thomas A., Ouslander, Sarah K., Russell, Alexander F., Gagné, Michel R., Pophristic, Vojislava, Liu, Zhiwei, Waters, Marcey L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Frustrated, or nonoptimal, interactions have been proposed to be essential to a protein’s ability to display responsive behavior such as allostery, conformational signaling, and signal transduction. However, the intentional incorporation of frustrated noncovalent interactions has not been explored as a design element in the field of dynamic foldamers. Here, we report the design, synthesis, characterization, and molecular dynamics simulations of the first dynamic water-soluble foldamer that, in response to a stimulus, exploits relief of frustration in its noncovalent network to structurally rearrange from a pleated to an intercalated columnar structure. Thus, relief of frustration provides the energetic driving force for structural rearrangement. This work represents a previously unexplored design element for the development of stimulus-responsive systems that has potential application to materials chemistry, synthetic biology, and molecular machines.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.3c09883