Beta-sheet folding of fragment (16-36) of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor as predicted by Monte Carlo simulated annealing.

A tertiary structure prediction is described using Monte Carlo simulated annealing for the peptide fragment corresponding to residues 16-36 of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI). The simulation starts with randomly chosen initial conformations and is performed without imposing experimental constraints using energy functions given for generic interatomic interactions. Out of 20 simulation trials, seven conformations show a sheet-like structure--two strands connected by a turn--although this sheet-like structure is not as rigid as that observed in native BPTI. It is also shown that these conformations are mostly looped and exhibit a native-like right-handed twist. Unlike the case with the C-peptide of RNase A, no conspicuous alpha-helical structure is found in any of the final conformations obtained in the simulation. However, the lowest-energy conformation does not resemble exactly the native structure. This indicates that the rigid beta-sheet conformation of native BPTI merely corresponds to a local minimum of the energy function if the fragment with residues 16-36 is isolated from the native protein. A statistical analysis of all 20 final conformations suggests that the tendency for the peptide segments to form extended beta-strands is strong for those with residues 18-24, and moderate for those with residues 30-35. The segment of residues 25-29 does not tend to form any definite structure. In native BPTI, the former segments are involved in the beta-sheet and the latter in the turn. A folding scenario is also speculated from this analysis.