Peptide bonds to proline, and to other
N-substituted amino acids (such as
sarcosine), are able to populate both the
cis and
trans isomers. Most peptide bonds overwhelmingly adopt the
trans isomer (typically 99.9% under unstrained conditions), chiefly because the amide hydrogen (
trans isomer) offers less steric repulsion to the preceding Cα atom than does the following Cα atom (
cis isomer). By contrast, the
cis and
trans isomers of the X-Pro peptide bond (where X represents any amino acid) both experience steric clashes with the neighboring substitution and have a much lower energy difference. Hence, the fraction of X-Pro peptide bonds in the
cis isomer under unstrained conditions is significantly elevated, with
cis fractions typically in the range of 3-10%. However, these values depend on the preceding amino acid, with Gly and aromatic residues yielding increased fractions of the
cis isomer.
Cis fractions up to 40% have been identified for aromatic–proline peptide bonds. From a kinetic standpoint,
cis–
trans proline
isomerization is a very slow process that can impede the progress of
protein folding by trapping one or more proline residues crucial for folding in the non-native isomer, especially when the native protein requires the
cis isomer. This is because proline residues are exclusively synthesized in the
ribosome as the
trans isomer form. All organisms possess
prolyl isomerase enzymes to catalyze this isomerization, and some
bacteria have specialized prolyl isomerases associated with the ribosome. However, not all prolines are essential for folding, and protein folding may proceed at a normal rate despite having non-native conformers of many X–Pro peptide bonds. ==Uses==