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Conformational and topographical studies of alpha-melanotropin "message" sequence and molecular modeling of the hMC1R melanocortin receptor.

The exciting and intriguing biological effects associated with amelanocyte stimulating hormone, α-MSH, have initiated a variety of studies to identify the biologically important conformations of the backbone and sidechains structures. To further investigate the topology of the critical "message" residues, several bicyclic (sidechain-to-sidechain) and x¹ restricted peptides have been synthesized and biologically examined, and selected analogues have been studied by NMR techniques and by theoretical molecular modeling studies. Bicyclic melanotropic peptides possessing the central sequence, Cys⁴-Asp⁵-His⁶-DPhe⁷-Arg⁸-Trp⁹-Cys¹⁰-Lys¹¹, exhibited nearly identical nanomolar biological potencies in the lizard skin bioassay. Molecular modeling studies suggested the hypothesis of incomplete receptor binding by either the His or Trp residue as being responsible for the decrease in potencies relative to a-MSH, and the parent monocyclic peptides from which these bicyclic peptides were designed. This hypothesis is further supported by twodimensional NMR studies of a representative bicyclic peptide, Ac-Cys⁴-Asp⁵-His⁶-DPhe⁷-Arg⁸-Trp⁹-Cys¹⁰-Lys¹¹-NH₂. Peptides synthesized to probe the topographical space of the tryptophan residue at position nine provided extraordinary results regarding the biological phenomena of prolongation. These peptides were based on the template, Ac-Nle⁴-Asp⁵-His⁶-DPhe⁷-Arg⁸-Xaa⁹-Lys¹⁰-NH₂, where Xaa consists of the four isomers of β-MeTrp, DTrp , and L- or D-TCA residues. Some of these peptides were selected for studies on the cloned hMC1 melanocortin receptor. These studies resulted in a partial hypothesis accounting for the prolonged biological activities observed in other physiological assay systems. Conformational analysis by solution 20 NMR techniques revealed similar peptide backbone secondary structure features with main differences of structure occurring in the sidechain x¹ space. The implications and results are discussed. Homology-based molecular modeling of the hMC1 melanocortin receptor was also undertaken and provided evidence for ligand-receptor interactions which are being tested by receptor mutagenesis studies. This three-dimensional computer model provides an opportunity to probe detail chemical ligand-receptor interactions and further study differences in biological activities and biological mechanisms.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:arizona.edu/oai:arizona.openrepository.com:10150/187200
Date January 1995
CreatorsHaskell-Luevano, Carrie.
ContributorsHruby, Victor J., Sawyer, Tomi K., Hadley, Mac E., O'Brien, David F., Miller, Walter B.
PublisherThe University of Arizona.
Source SetsUniversity of Arizona
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext, Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic)
RightsCopyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author.

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