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Dive into the research topics where Renee L. Beyer is active.

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Featured researches published by Renee L. Beyer.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Helix Nucleation by the Smallest Known α-Helix in Water.

Huy N. Hoang; Russell W. Driver; Renee L. Beyer; Timothy A. Hill; Aline Dantas de Araujo; Fabien Plisson; Rosemary S. Harrison; Lena Goedecke; Nicholas E. Shepherd; David P. Fairlie

Cyclic pentapeptides (e.g. Ac-(cyclo-1,5)-[KAXAD]-NH2 ; X=Ala, 1; Arg, 2) in water adopt one α-helical turn defined by three hydrogen bonds. NMR structure analysis reveals a slight distortion from α-helicity at the C-terminal aspartate caused by torsional restraints imposed by the K(i)-D(i+4) lactam bridge. To investigate this effect on helix nucleation, the more water-soluble 2 was appended to N-, C-, or both termini of a palindromic peptide ARAARAARA (≤5 % helicity), resulting in 67, 92, or 100 % relative α-helicity, as calculated from CD spectra. From the C-terminus of peptides, 2 can nucleate at least six α-helical turns. From the N-terminus, imperfect alignment of the Asp5 backbone amide in 2 reduces helix nucleation, but is corrected by a second unit of 2 separated by 0-9 residues from the first. These cyclic peptides are extremely versatile helix nucleators that can be placed anywhere in 5-25 residue peptides, which correspond to most helix lengths in protein-protein interactions.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

Linkage isomerism in the binding of pentapeptide Ac-His(Ala)3His-NH2 to (ethylenediamine)palladium(II): effect of the binding mode on peptide conformation.

Huy N. Hoang; G. K. Bryant; Michael J. Kelso; Renee L. Beyer; Trevor G. Appleton; David P. Fairlie

The reaction of the pentapeptide Ac-His1-Ala2-Ala3-Ala4-His5-NH2 (AcHAAAHNH2) (1) with [Pd(en)(ONO2)2] (en = NH2CH2CH2NH2) in either DMF-d(7) or H2O:D2O (90%:10%) gave three linkage isomers of [Pd(en)(AcHAAAHNH2)](2+) (2), 2a, 2b, and 2c, which differ only in which pair of imidazole nitrogen atoms bind to Pd. In the most abundant isomer, 2a, Pd is bound by N1 from each of the two imidazole rings. In the minor isomers 2b and 2c, Pd is bound by N1(His1) and N3(His5) and by N3(His1) and N1(His5), respectively. The reactions of [Pd(en)(ONO2)2] with the N-methylated peptides Ac-(N3-MeHis)-Ala-Ala-Ala-(N3-MeHis)-NH2 (AcH*AAAH*NH2) (3), Ac-(N3-MeHis)-Ala-Ala-Ala-(N1-MeHis)-NH2 (AcH(*)AAAH(#)NH2) (4), and Ac-(N1-MeHis)-Ala-Ala-Ala-(N3-Me-His)-NH2 (AcH(#)AAAH(*)NH2) (5) each gave a single species [Pd(en)(peptide)](2+) in N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) or aqueous solution, 7, 8, and 9, respectively, with Pd bound by the two nonmethylated imidazole nitrogen atoms in each case. These complexes were analogous to 2a, 2b, and 2c, respectively. Ac-(N1-MeHis)-Ala-Ala-Ala-(N1-MeHis)-NH2 (AcH(#)AAAH(#)NH2) (6) with [Pd(en)(ONO2)2] in DMF slowly gave a single product, [Pd(en)(AcH(#)AAAH(#)NH2)](2+) (10), in which Pd was bound by the N3 of each imidazole ring. The corresponding linkage isomer of 2 was not observed. Complex 10 was also the major product in aqueous solution, but other species were also present. All compounds were exhaustively characterized in solution by multinuclear 1D ((1)H , (13)C, and, with (15)N-labeled ethylenediamine, (15)N) and 2D (correlation spectroscopy, total correlation spectroscopy, transverse rotating-frame Overhauser effect spectroscopy (T-ROESY), heteronuclear multiple-bond correlation, and heteronuclear single quantum coherence) NMR spectra, circular dichroism (CD) spectra, electrospray mass spectroscopy, and reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. ROESY spectra were used to calculate the structure of 2a, which contained a single turn of a peptide alpha helix in both DMF and water, the helix being better defined in DMF. The Pd(en)(2+) moiety was not used in structure calculations, but its location and coordination by one imidazole N1 from each histidine to form a 22-membered metallocycle were unambiguously established. Convergence of the structures was greatest when calculated with two hydrogen-bond constraints (Ala4 peptide NH...OC acetyl and His5 peptide NH...OC-His1) that were indicated by the low temperature dependence of these NH chemical shifts. Vicinal HN-CHalpha coupling constants and chemical shifts of alpha-H atoms were also consistent with a helical conformation. Similar long-range ROE correlations were observed for [Pd(en)(AcH(*)AAAH(*)NH2)](2+) (7), which displayed a CD spectrum in aqueous solution that suggested the presence of some helicity. Long-range ROE correlations were not observed for 8, 9, or 10, but a combination of NMR data and CD spectroscopy was interpreted in terms of the conformational behavior of the coordinated pentapeptide. Only for the linkage isomer [Pd(en)(AcH(*)AAAH(#)NH2)](2+) (8) was there evidence of a contribution from a helical conformation. The data for 8 were interpreted as interconversion between the helix and random coil conformations. Zn(2+) with peptides gave broad NMR peaks attributed to lability of this metal ion, while reactions of cis-[Pt(NH3)2(ONO2)2] were slow, giving a complex mixture of products rather than the macrochelate ring observed with Pd(en)(2+). In summary, these studies indicate that Pd(en)(2+) coordinates to histidine with similar preference for each of the two imidazole nitrogens, enabling the formation of up to four linkage isomers in its complexes with pentapeptides His-xxx-His. Only the N1-N1 linkage isomer that forms a 22-membered macrochelate ring is able to induce an alpha-helical peptide conformation, whereas the 20- and 21-membered rings of linkage isomers do not. This suggests that linkage isomeric mixtures may compromise histidine coordination to metal ions and reduce alpha-helicity.


Australian Journal of Chemistry | 2017

Alpha Helix Nucleation by a Simple Cyclic Tetrapeptide

Huy N. Hoang; Chongyang Wu; Renee L. Beyer; Timothy A. Hill; David P. Fairlie

The simple cyclic tetrapeptide cyclo-(1,4)-[Ala-Arg-Ala-homoGlu]-NH2 (3) is shown to adopt an unusual alpha-turn structure, which is not alpha-helical but can nucleate alpha-helicity when attached to the N-terminus of either model peptides or two biologically relevant peptides. This new N-terminal helix-capping macrocycle provides very simple and rapid synthetic access to alpha-helical peptide structures.


Organic Letters | 2008

Cyclooligomerization of a Helix-Bearing Template into Macrocycles Bearing Multiple Helices

Renee L. Beyer; Yogendra Singh; David P. Fairlie

Cyclooligomerization was investigated for separating and spatially arranging helical peptides as discontinuous surfaces. Tetrapeptide H-[Ile-Ser-Lys(Ox)]-OH, containing a turn-inducing oxazole constraint, was connected through its lysine side chain via a beta-alanine linker to the C-terminus of a two-turn helical nonapeptide Ac-(cyclo-4,8)-LRL [KARAD](Aib). The resulting helix-appended template was self-condensed and cyclized to a library of macrocycles ( n = 2-6) containing multiple (2-6) helices. An NMR structure shows retention of alpha helicity in the cyclotrimer ( n = 3).


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Structures of peptide agonists for human protease activated receptor 2.

Martin J. Stoermer; Bernadine M. Flanagan; Renee L. Beyer; Praveen K. Madala; David P. Fairlie

Protease activated receptor 2 (PAR2) is an unusual G-protein coupled receptor in being self-activated, after pruning of the N-terminus by serine proteases like trypsin and tryptase. Short synthetic peptides corresponding to the newly exposed N-terminal hexapeptide sequence also activate PAR2 on immunoinflammatory, cancer and many normal cell types. (1)H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy were used here to search for structural clues to activating mechanisms of the hexapeptide agonists SLIGRL (rat), SLIGKV (human) and the peptidomimetic analogue, 2-furoyl-LIGRLO. Either with a free or acetyl capped N-terminus, these agonist peptides display significant propensity in aprotic (DMSO) or lipidic (water-SDS) solvents for turn-like conformations, which are predicted to be receptor-binding conformations in the transmembrane or loops region of PAR2. These motifs may be valuable for the design of small molecule PAR2 agonists and antagonists as prospective new drugs for regulating inflammatory and proliferative diseases.


Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2003

Short peptide alpha helices induced by multiple metal clips

Huy N. Hoang; G. K. Bryant; Micheal J. Kelso; Renee L. Beyer; Trevor G. Appleton; David P. Fairlie

Alpha helices are key structural components of proteins and important recognition motifs in biology. New techniques for stabilizing short peptide helices could be valuable for studying protein folding, modeling proteins, creating artificial proteins, and may aid the design of inhibitors or mimics of protein function. We previously reported* that 5-15 residue peptides, corresponding to the Zn-binding domain of thermolysin, react with [Pd(en)(ONO,),]in DMF-d’ and 90% H,O 10% DzO to form a 22-membered [Pd(en)(H*ELTH*)]2+ macrocycle that is helical in solution and acts as a template in nucleating helicity in both Cand N- terminal directions within the longer sequences in DMF. ~f~~g,J~p?:~~q&~+~~ ’ w w the difficulty of fixing intramolecular amide NH...OC H-bonds in 6,“;;” ( k.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2004

α-turn mimetics: Short peptide α-Helices composed of cyclic metallopentapeptide modules

Michael J. Kelso; Renee L. Beyer; Huy N. Hoang; Ami S. Lakdawala; James P. Snyder; Warren V. Oliver; Tom A. Robertson; Trevor G. Appleton; David P. Fairlie

U”C.a , p d


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2004

Metal Clips Induce Folding of a Short Unstructured Peptide into an a-Helix via Turn Conformations in Water. Kinetic versus Thermodynamic Products

Renee L. Beyer; Huy N. Hoang; Trevor G. Appleton; David P. Fairlie

. competition with the H-bond donor solvent water. To expand the utility of [Pd(en)(H*XXXH*)]*+ as a helix- @r4”8 & oJ#:& &G& @-qd ,‘d@-gyp promoting module in solution, we now report the result that Ac- ‘


Angewandte Chemie | 2011

Protein α-Turns Recreated in Structurally Stable Small Molecules†

Huy N. Hoang; Russell W. Driver; Renee L. Beyer; Alpeshkumar K. Malde; Giang Thanh Le; Giovanni Abbenante; Alan E. Mark; David P. Fairlie

4: %


Journal of Peptide Science | 2007

Hepta and octapeptide agonists of protease-activated receptor 2

Mark G. Devlin; Bernhard Pfeiffer; Bernadine M. Flanagan; Renee L. Beyer; Thomas M. Cocks; David P. Fairlie

yyy + H*ELTH*H*VTDH*-NH,(l), AC-H*ELTH*AVTDYH*ELTH*- NH, (2) and AC-H*AAAH*H*ELTH*H*VTDH*-NH* (3) react with multiple equivalents of [Pd(en)(ONO,),] to produce exclusively 4-6 respectively in both DMF-d7 and water (90% Hz0 10% D,O). Mass spectrometry, 15N- and 2D ‘H- NMR spectroscopy, and CD spectra were used to characterise the structures 4-6, and their three dimensional structures were calculated from NOE restraints using simulated annealing protocols. Results demonstrate (a) selective coordination of metal ions at (i, i+4) histidine positions in water and DMF, (b) incorporation of 2 and 3 a turn-mimicking modules [Pd(en)(HELTH)]2+ in lo-15 residue peptides, and (c) facile conversion of unstructured peptides into 3- and 4- turn helices of macrocycles, with well defined a-helicity throughout and more structure in DMF than in water.

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Huy N. Hoang

University of Queensland

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Giang Thanh Le

University of Queensland

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