Geometry The majority of β-strands are arranged adjacent to other strands and form an extensive
hydrogen bond network with their neighbors in which the
N−H groups in the backbone of one strand establish
hydrogen bonds with the
C=O groups in the backbone of the adjacent strands. In the fully extended β-strand, successive side chains point straight up and straight down in an alternating pattern. Adjacent β-strands in a β-sheet are aligned so that their Cα atoms are adjacent and their side chains point in the same direction. The "pleated" appearance of β-strands arises from tetrahedral chemical bonding at the Cα atom; for example, if a side chain points straight up, then the bonds to the C′ must point slightly downwards, since its bond angle is approximately 109.5°. The pleating causes the distance between C and C to be approximately , rather than the expected from two fully extended
trans peptides. The "sideways" distance between adjacent Cα atoms in
hydrogen-bonded β-strands is roughly . However, β-strands are rarely perfectly extended; rather, they exhibit a twist. The energetically preferred
dihedral angles near (
φ,
ψ) = (–135°, 135°) (broadly, the upper left region of the
Ramachandran plot) diverge significantly from the fully extended conformation (
φ,
ψ) = (–180°, 180°). The twist is often associated with alternating fluctuations in the
dihedral angles to prevent the individual β-strands in a larger sheet from splaying apart. A good example of a strongly twisted β-hairpin can be seen in the protein
BPTI. The side chains point outwards from the folds of the pleats, roughly perpendicularly to the plane of the sheet; successive amino acid residues point outwards on alternating faces of the sheet.
Hydrogen bonding patterns Because peptide chains have a directionality conferred by their
N-terminus and
C-terminus, β-strands too can be said to be directional. They are usually represented in protein topology diagrams by an arrow pointing toward the C-terminus. Adjacent β-strands can form
hydrogen bonds in antiparallel, parallel, or mixed arrangements. In an antiparallel arrangement, the successive β-strands alternate directions 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 (–140°, 135°) in antiparallel sheets. In this case, if two atoms C and C 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 may be slightly less stable because it introduces nonplanarity in the inter-strand hydrogen bonding pattern. The dihedral angles (
φ,
ψ) are about (–120°, 115°) 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, however it is also fundamentally more difficult for parallel β-sheets to form because strands with N and C termini aligned necessarily must be very distant in sequence . There is also evidence that parallel β-sheet may be more stable since small amyloidogenic sequences appear to generally aggregate into β-sheet fibrils composed of primarily parallel β-sheet strands, where one would expect anti-parallel fibrils if anti-parallel were more stable. In parallel β-sheet structure, if two atoms C and C 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
i may form hydrogen bonds to residues
j − 1 and
j + 1; this is known as a
wide pair of hydrogen bonds. By contrast, residue
j may hydrogen-bond to different residues altogether, or to none at all. The hydrogen bond arrangement in parallel beta sheet resembles that in an
amide ring motif with 11 atoms. 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, suggesting that this pattern is less stable than the anti-parallel arrangement, however bioinformatic analysis always struggles with extracting structural thermodynamics since there are always numerous other structural features present in whole proteins. Also proteins are inherently constrained by folding kinetics as well as folding thermodynamics, so one must always be careful in concluding stability from bioinformatic analysis. The
hydrogen bonding of β-strands need not be perfect, but can exhibit localized disruptions known as
β-bulges. The hydrogen bonds lie roughly in the plane of the sheet, with the
peptide carbonyl groups pointing in alternating directions with successive residues; for comparison, successive carbonyls point in the
same direction in the
alpha helix.
Amino acid propensities Large aromatic residues (
tyrosine,
phenylalanine,
tryptophan) and β-branched amino acids (
threonine,
valine,
isoleucine) are favored to be found in β-strands in the
middle of β-sheets. Different types of residues (such as
proline) are likely to be found in the
edge strands in β-sheets, presumably to avoid the "edge-to-edge" association between proteins that might lead to aggregation and
amyloid formation. ==Common structural motifs==