Significant delocalisation of the
lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen atom gives the group a
partial double-bond character. The partial double bond renders the amide group
planar, occurring in either the
cis or
trans isomers. In the unfolded state of proteins, the peptide groups are free to isomerize and adopt both isomers; however, in the folded state, only a single isomer is adopted at each position (with rare exceptions). The trans form is preferred overwhelmingly in most peptide bonds (roughly 1000:1 ratio in trans:cis populations). However, X-Pro peptide groups tend to have a roughly 30:1 ratio, presumably because the symmetry between the Cα and Cδ atoms of
proline makes the cis and trans isomers nearly equal in energy, as shown in the figure below. The
dihedral angle associated with the peptide group (defined by the four atoms Cα–C'–N–Cα) is denoted \omega; \omega = 0^\circ for the cis isomer (
synperiplanar conformation), and \omega = 180^\circ for the trans isomer (
antiperiplanar conformation). Amide groups can isomerize about the C'–N bond between the cis and trans forms, albeit slowly (\tau \sim 20 seconds at room temperature). The
transition states \omega = \pm 90^\circ require that the partial double bond be broken, so that the activation energy is roughly 80 kJ/mol (20 kcal/mol). However, the
activation energy can be lowered (and the isomerization
catalyzed) by changes that favor the single-bonded form, such as placing the peptide group in a hydrophobic environment or donating a hydrogen bond to the nitrogen atom of an X-Pro peptide group. Both of these mechanisms for lowering the activation energy have been observed in
peptidyl prolyl isomerases (PPIases), which are naturally occurring enzymes that catalyze the cis-trans isomerization of X-Pro peptide bonds. Conformational
protein folding is usually much faster (typically 10–100 ms) than cis-trans isomerization (10–100 s). A nonnative isomer of some peptide groups can disrupt the conformational folding significantly, either slowing it or preventing it from even occurring until the native isomer is reached. However, not all peptide groups have the same effect on folding; nonnative isomers of other peptide groups may not affect folding at all. ==Chemical reactions==