Our understanding of protein folds relies fundamentally on the set of secondary structures found in the proteomes. Yet, there also exist intriguing structures and motifs that are underrepresented in natural biopolymeric systems. One example is the polyproline II helix, which is usually considered to have a polar character and therefore does not form membrane spanning sections of membrane proteins. In our work, we have introduced specially designed polyproline II helices into the hydrophobic membrane milieu and used 19F NMR to monitor the helix alignment in oriented lipid bilayers. Our results show that these artificial hydrophobic peptides can adopt several different alignment states. If the helix is shorter than the thickness of the hydrop...
AbstractHydrophobic mismatch arises from a difference in the hydrophobic thickness of a lipid membra...
A series of nine amphiphilic, pore-forming α-helical KIA peptides (KIAGKIA repeats) with lengths bet...
Hydrophobic mismatch is a well-recognized principle in the interaction of transmembrane proteins wit...
AbstractWe used solid-state deuterium NMR spectroscopy and an approach involving geometric analysis ...
AbstractHydrophobic mismatch still represents a puzzle for transmembrane peptides, despite the appar...
AbstractA novel mechanism for membrane modulation of transmembrane protein structure, and consequent...
Integral membrane proteins often contain proline residues in their alpha-helical transmembrane (TM) ...
The orientations, geometries and lipid interactions of designed transmembrane (TM) peptides have att...
AbstractWe used solid-state deuterium NMR spectroscopy and geometric analysis of labeled alanines to...
AbstractProtein environments substantially influence the balance of molecular interactions that gene...
AbstractInterest centers here on whether a polyproline II helix can propagate through adjacent non-p...
AbstractThe packing structures of transmembrane helices are traditionally attributed to patterns in ...
The amphipathic a-helical peptide KIA14 [(KIAGKIA)(2)-NH2] was studied in membranes using circular d...
Abstractα-Helical transmembrane peptides, named WALP, with a hydrophobic sequence of leucine and ala...
AbstractHelical peptides reconstituted into oriented phospholipid bilayers were studied by proton-de...
AbstractHydrophobic mismatch arises from a difference in the hydrophobic thickness of a lipid membra...
A series of nine amphiphilic, pore-forming α-helical KIA peptides (KIAGKIA repeats) with lengths bet...
Hydrophobic mismatch is a well-recognized principle in the interaction of transmembrane proteins wit...
AbstractWe used solid-state deuterium NMR spectroscopy and an approach involving geometric analysis ...
AbstractHydrophobic mismatch still represents a puzzle for transmembrane peptides, despite the appar...
AbstractA novel mechanism for membrane modulation of transmembrane protein structure, and consequent...
Integral membrane proteins often contain proline residues in their alpha-helical transmembrane (TM) ...
The orientations, geometries and lipid interactions of designed transmembrane (TM) peptides have att...
AbstractWe used solid-state deuterium NMR spectroscopy and geometric analysis of labeled alanines to...
AbstractProtein environments substantially influence the balance of molecular interactions that gene...
AbstractInterest centers here on whether a polyproline II helix can propagate through adjacent non-p...
AbstractThe packing structures of transmembrane helices are traditionally attributed to patterns in ...
The amphipathic a-helical peptide KIA14 [(KIAGKIA)(2)-NH2] was studied in membranes using circular d...
Abstractα-Helical transmembrane peptides, named WALP, with a hydrophobic sequence of leucine and ala...
AbstractHelical peptides reconstituted into oriented phospholipid bilayers were studied by proton-de...
AbstractHydrophobic mismatch arises from a difference in the hydrophobic thickness of a lipid membra...
A series of nine amphiphilic, pore-forming α-helical KIA peptides (KIAGKIA repeats) with lengths bet...
Hydrophobic mismatch is a well-recognized principle in the interaction of transmembrane proteins wit...