The kinetics of isomerization of the helical forms of three oligoprolines was determined by far-ultraviolet CD spectropolarimetry and kinetic analysis by singular value decomposition. ZRA (Pro(3)-X-Pro(2)-Y-Pro(2)-Z-Pro(3)) and ZRA2 (Pro(7)-X-Pro(2)-Y-Pro(2)-Z-Pro(7)) bear large redox-active substituents on proline residues X, Y, and Z, but P9 (Pros) does not. All three peptides formed a stable proline-II helix in water. In acetonitrile, both ZRA2 and P9 were converted into a proline-I helical form but ZRA remained predominantly in the proline-II helical form. Evidently, in order to undergo substantial proline II-->I isomerization, an oligoproline chain containing large substituents needs to have a segment of consecutive unsubstituted proline residues that is sufficiently long to form a stable proline helix. Biexponential kinetics (A-->B, k(1) = similar to 3.3 x 10(-4) s(-1); B-->C, k(2) = similar to 0.8 x 10(-4) s(-1)) were observed for the proline II-->I isomerization of ZRA2 and P9 in acetonitrile and for the proline I-->II isomerization of ZRA2 in water, which provides evidence for the growth and decay of a major kinetic intermediate.