posted on 2021-06-17, 13:41authored bySteven
R. E. Draper, Zachary B. Jones, Seth O. Earl, Nicholas A. Dalley, Dallin S. Ashton, Anthony J. Carter, Benjamin M. Conover, Joshua L. Price
Here
we show that an NH-π interaction between a highly conserved
Asn and a nearby Trp stabilizes the WW domain of the human protein
Pin1. The strength of this NH-π interaction depends on the structure
of the arene, with NH-π interactions involving Trp or naphthylalanine
being substantially more stabilizing than those involving Tyr or Phe.
Calculations suggest arene size and polarizability are key structural
determinants of NH-π interaction strength. Methylation or PEGylation
of the Asn side-chain amide nitrogen each strengthens the associated
NH-π interaction, though likely for different reasons. We hypothesize
that methylation introduces steric clashes that destabilize conformations
in which the NH-π interaction is not possible, whereas PEGylation
strengthens the NH-π interaction via localized desolvation of
the protein surface.