Conformations of cyclic octapeptides and the influence of heterocyclic ring constraints upon calcium binding†
Abstract
A comparison is made between the structures and calcium binding properties of four cyclic octapeptides that differ in the number of heterocyclic thiazole and oxazoline ring constraints. The conformations of the naturally occurring cyclic octapeptides ascidiacyclamide 1 and patellamide D 2, which each contain two oxazoline and two thiazole rings, are compared by 1H NMR spectroscopy with the analogues cyclo(Thr-D-Val(Thz)-Ile)23 with just two thiazoles, and cyclo(Thr-D-Val-αAbu-Ile)24, with no 5-membered rings. The conformations observed in the solid state for ascidiacyclamide (“saddle”) and patellamide D (“twisted figure of eight”) were retained in solution, whilst peptide 3 was found to have a “chair” shape and peptide 4 displayed a range of conformations. The solid state structure of 4 revealed that the peptide takes a relatively planar conformation with a number of transannular hydrogen bonds, which are apparently retained in solution. Complexation studies utilising 1H NMR and CD spectroscopy yielded 1∶1 calcium–peptide binding constants (log K) for the four peptides (2.9 (1), 2.8 (2), 4.0 (3) and 5.5 (4)) as well as a 1∶2 metal–peptide binding constant for 3 (log K = 4.5). The affinity for Ca2+ thus decreases with increasing number of 5-membered ring constraints in the macrocycle (4 > 3 > 2 ≈ 1).