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. 2015 Jul 27;112(32):9810–9815. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1508575112

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1.

Structure of the peptide-appended pillar[5]arene (PAP) channel. (A) The PAP channel (C325H320N30O60) forms a pentameric tubular structure through intramolecular hydrogen bonding between adjacent alternating d-l-d phenylalanine chains (d-Phe-l-Phe-d-Phe-COOH). (B) Molecular modeling (Gaussian09, semiempirical, PM6) of the PAP channel shows that the benzyl rings of the phenylalanine side chains extend outward from the channel walls (C, purple; H, white; O, red; N, blue). (C and D) MD simulation of the PAP channel in a POPC bilayer revealed its interactions with the surrounding lipids. The five chain-like units of the channel are colored purple, blue, ochre, green, and violet, with hydrogen atoms omitted. In C, the POPC lipids are represented by thin tan lines; in D, water is shown as red (oxygen) and white (hydrogen) van der Waals spheres.