“…Over the years, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy has become one of the major tools of obtaining such structural information at the atomistic level (Judge & Watts, 2011;Knight, Felli, Pierattelli, Emsley, & Pintacuda, 2013;Patel, Pithadia, Brender, Fierke, & Ramamoorthy, 2014;Quinn & Polenova, 2017;Tang, Comellas, & Rienstra, 2013). In parallel, structural studies of small biological molecules such as peptides have also gained much importance since short stretches of amino acid sequences are known to nucleate protein folding with localized interactions (Kantharaju et al, 2009;Keller et al, 1998;Venkatraman, Shankaramma, & Balaram, 2001). In order to understand the conformational preference of the peptides, it is important to have a knowledge of the structure of the peptides in finer details.…”