The β sheet (also β-pleated sheet or β strand) is a commonly occurring form of regular secondary structure in proteins. It consists of a stretch of amino acids whose peptide backbones are almost fully extended, resulting in an elongated pleatlike structure in which the peptide carbonyls point in alternating directions relative to the plane of the sheet. A typical strand is about five to ten amino acids long.
In the most common usage, β strand refers to a single continuous stretch of amino acids adopting an extended conformation and involved in hydrogen bonds; by contrast, a β sheet refers to an assembly of such strands that are hydrogen-bonded to each other. However, the term "β sheet" is also sometimes used as a synonym of "β strand", i.e., for a single segment of extended, hydrogen-bonded amino acids.
However, β strands are rarely perfectly extended; rather, they exhibit a slight twist, owing to the departures of their preferred dihedral angles (φ, ψ) = (broadly, the upper left region of the Ramachandran plot) from the fully extended conformation (φ, ψ) = Voet D, Voet JG. (2004). Biochemistry Vol 1 3rd ed. Wiley. See esp. pp 227-231.. The twist is often associated with alternating fluctuations in the dihedral angles to prevent the β strands from splaying apart. A good example of such a twisted β-hairpin can be seen in BPTI.
In an antiparallel arrangement, the successive β strands alternate directions (as in the diagram) so that the N-terminus of one strand is adjacent to the C-terminus of the next. This is the arrangement that produces the strongest inter-strand stability because it allows the inter-strand hydrogen bonds between carbonyls and amines to be planar, which is their preferred orientation. The peptide backbone dihedral angles (φ, ψ) are about in antiparallel sheets. In this case, if two atoms and are adjacent in two hydrogen-bonded β strands, then they form two mutual backbone hydrogen bonds to each other's flanking peptide groups; this is known as a close pair of hydrogen bonds.
In a parallel arrangement, all of the N-termini of successive strands are oriented in the same direction; this orientation is slightly less stable because it introduces nonplanarity in the inter-strand hydrogen bonding pattern. The dihedral angles (φ, ψ) are about in parallel sheets. It is rare to find less than five interacting parallel strands in a motif, suggesting that a smaller number of strands may be unstable. In this case, if two atoms and are adjacent in two hydrogen-bonded β strands, then they do not hydrogen bond to each other; rather one residue forms hydrogen bonds to the residues that flank the other (but not vice versa). For example, residue may form hydrogen bonds to residues and ; this is known as a wide pair of hydrogen bonds. By contrast, residue may hydrogen-bond to different residues altogether, or to none at all.
Finally, an individual strand may exhibit a mixed bonding pattern, with a parallel strand on one side and an antiparallel strand on the other. Such arrangements are less common than a random distribution of orientations would suggest, indicating that this pattern is less stable than the antiparallel arrangement.
The hydrogen bonding of β strands need not be perfect, but can exhibit localized disruptions known as beta bulges.
β sheets can be open, meaning that they have two edge strands (cf. flavodoxin fold or the immunoglobulin fold)) or they can be closed beta barrels (cf. TIM barrel). β-Barrels are often described by their stagger. Some open β sheets are very curved and fold over on themselves (cd SH3 domain) or form horseshoe shapes (cf. ribonuclease inhibitor). Open β sheets can assemble face-to-face (cf. beta-propeller domain or immunoglobulin fold) or edge-to-edge, forming one big β sheet.
The two-strand helix is found in the enzyme pectate lyase. Its two loops are each six residues long and bind stabilizing calcium ions to maintain the integrity of the structure. The more complex three-strand helix contains three linking loops, of which one is consistently two residues long and the others are variable. This structure is found in bacteriophage P22 tailspike protein. (see Carl Branden and John Tooze. 1999. Introduction to Protein Structure 2nd ed. Garland Publishing: New York, NY. See esp. pp 20-32 and ch. 5.)
Some proteins that are disordered or helical as monomers, such as amyloid β (see amyloid plaque) can form β-sheet-rich oligomeric structures associated with pathological states. The amyloid β protein's oligomeric form is implicated as a cause of Alzheimer's. Its structure has yet to be determined in full, but recent data suggests that it may resemble an unusual two-strand β helix.Nelson R, Sawaya MR, Balbirnie M, Madsen AO, Riekel C, Grothe R, Eisenberg D. 2005. Structure of the cross-beta spine of amyloid-like fibrils. Nature 435: 773-8.
The side chains from the amino acid residues found in a β sheet structure may also be arranged such that many of the adjacent sidechains on one side of the sheet are hydrophobic, while many of those adjacent to each other on the alternate side of the sheet are polar or charged (hydrophilic), which can be useful if the sheet is to form a boundary between polar/watery and nonpolar/greasy environments.
biochemistry | Protein structural motifs
Beta-Faltblatt | Beta-lámina | Feuillet bêta | Βシート | Bèta-sheet | Harmonijka beta | Β-折叠层
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