Scientists from Prague and Lund used this fact to unravel a new binding motif, wherein the positively charged side chains of arginine amino acids bind to each other in the presence of negatively charged terminal groups or side chains of peptides or proteins. Subsequently, they have identified an analogous motif in more than two hundred biologically significant structures in a protein database.
"This newly discovered binding motif will help us to rationalize why the peptides with a high content of arginine easily pass through cell membranes and how to use this knowledge for designing efficient transport of drug molecules into the cell," says Pavel Jungwirth.
Pavel Jungwirth’s Group built upon their long-term research aimed at understanding the unusual properties of the arginine amino acid, which is sometimes referred to in biochemical circles as the "arginine magic".
Article:
G. Tesei, M. Vazdar, M. Ringkjøbing Jensen, C. Cragnell, P.E. Mason, J. Heyda, M. Skepö, P. Jungwirth, M. Lund:
Self-association of a highly charged arginine-rich cell-penetrating peptide.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 114 (43): 11428-11433, 2017
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