A synthetic octadecapeptide with the amino acid sequence of residues 23-40 of toxin alpha from Naja nigricollis, cyclized with a disulfide bridge between residues 23 and 40, induces antibodies that cross-react with toxin alpha. We report a structural analysis of this peptide in aqueous solution using NMR spectroscopy and molecular modeling. Structures compatible with the 151 obtained NMR distance restraints were generated using a random simulated annealing protocol followed by restrained high-temperature dynamics and energy minimization. The generated structures are compared with that of the corresponding sequence in the native toxin. The two stretches 23-28 and 37-40 adopt a canonical beta-strand structure in the toxin but are disordered in the peptide. The region 28-36 is ordered in both the peptide and the toxin. Residues 28-30 and 34-36 adopt beta-strand structures in the toxin but loop structures in the peptide. Residues 30-33 form a reverse turn in both the peptide and the toxin. Residues Val-27, Trp-28, Ile-35, and Ile-36 form a hydrophobic cluster. The similar, reverse-turn fold of residues 30-33 in the peptide and the toxin may be associated with the immunogenic cross-reactivity.