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1.
Summary Amide-resolved, hydrogen-deuterium exchange from bee venom melittin reconstituted in fully hydrated vesicles suspended in D2O buffer was measured using a technique involving (1) trapping samples throughout an exchange time course by rapid freezing and lyophilization; and (2) dissolving the dried peptide/lipid mixtures in deuteromethanol to record high-resolution spectra using semiselective excitation pulses to select peptide amide signals in the presence of large excess lipid signals. Two-dimensional, amide-selective GaussNOESY and fingerprint-selective off-diagonal PingCOSY spectra are shown to be suitable for rapid acquisition of amide-selective spectra, obtained throughout a time course of amide exchange in the membrane-bound state. Membrane-reconstituted melittin is shown to contain two sequences of exchange-stable amides, corresponding to helical regions on either side of the single proline residue.  相似文献   

2.
The location and stability of helical secondary structure in a fragment comprising an extended sequence of the S4 transmembrane segment of the Shaker potassium channel was determined in methanol, and when bound to vesicles composed of egg phosphatidylcholine: egg phosphatidylglycerol (4:1; mol:mol) in water. The N-acetylated, C-amidated peptide corresponds to the sequence comprising residues A355-I384 in the Shaker potassium channel. Although NOEs characteristic of helical structure encompass essentially the full peptide sequence in methanol, analysis of amide and CH(alpha) chemical shifts, and amide exchange protection factors establish that stable helical structure comprises only around the first 22 amino acids of the 30 residue peptide. This sequence corresponds to that predicted to have the highest helical stability in water, indicating that while helical structure is considerably stabilised in methanol, the relative helical propensities of amino acids in methanol may be similar to those in water.In the presence of vesicles containing negatively charged lipids, helical structure corresponding to a maximum of around 40 % of the extended S4 peptide is induced; no helical structure is induced in the presence of vesicles composed only of neutral lipids. The location of stable helical structure in the membrane-bound peptide was determined by amide hydrogen-deuterium exchange trapping, and was shown to encompass the sequence between residues near M2 and I18. This sequence is similar to that having high helix propensity in water and methanol, supporting the idea that intrinsic helical propensities are important in defining the location of stable helical structure in polypeptides bound in the interfacial region of lipid bilayers. The study defines an approach to determining the location of, and contributions to, the stability of helical secondary structure in membrane-reconstituted polypeptides.  相似文献   

3.
Malkit Sami  Christopher Dempsey   《FEBS letters》1988,240(1-2):211-215
The hydrophobic transbilayer peptide of erythrocyte glycophorin has been purified following exchange of tritium into the backbone amides, and reconstituted in egg phosphatidylcholine micelles. Analysis of tritium exchange from the backbone amides of the membrane-reconstituted peptide shows that about two of the amides are virtually non-exchangeable, about 10 are slowed by factors of 10(7) relative to free amides in unstructured water soluble peptides and the remainder of the amides (about 20) have slowing factors of less than 1000. These classes of amides are proposed to reflect the stability of the peptide with respect to hydrogen bond breaking fluctuations and the accessibility of the amides to exchange catalysts in different regions of the bilayer.  相似文献   

4.
Incorporation of the helical antimicrobial peptide alamethicin from aqueous phase into hydrated phases of dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE) and dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) was investigated within a range of peptide concentrations and temperatures by time-resolved synchrotron X-ray diffraction. It was found that alamethicin influences the organizations of the non-bilayer-forming (DOPE) and the bilayer-forming (DOPC) lipids in different ways. In DOPC, only the bilayer thickness was affected, while in DOPE new phases were induced. At low peptide concentrations (<1.10(-4) M), an inverted hexagonal (H(II)) phase was observed as with DOPE dispersions in pure buffer solution. A coexistence of two cubic structures was found at the critical peptide concentration for induction of new lipid/peptide phases. The first one Q224 (space group Pn3m) was identified within the entire temperature region studied (from 1 to 45 degrees C) and was found in coexistence with H(II)-phase domains. The second lipid/peptide cubic structure was present only at temperatures below 16 degrees C and its X-ray reflections were better fitted by a Q212 (P4(3)32) space group, rather than by the expected Q229 (Im3m) space group. At alamethicin concentrations of 1 mM and higher, a nonlamellar phase transition from a Q224 cubic phase into an H(II) phase was observed. Within the investigated range of peptide concentrations, lamellar structures of two different bilayer periods were established with the bilayer-forming lipid DOPC. They correspond to lipid domains of associated and nonassociated helical peptide. The obtained X-ray results suggest that the amphiphilic alamethicin molecules adsorb from the aqueous phase at the lipid head group/water interface of the DOPE and DOPC membranes. At sufficiently high (>1.10(-4) M) solution concentrations, the peptide is probably accommodated in the head group region of the lipids thus inducing structural features of mixed lipid/peptide phases.  相似文献   

5.
We tested the hypothesis that the recurrence of hydrophobic amino acids in a polypeptide at positions falling in an axial, hydrophobic strip if the sequence were coiled as an alpha helix, can lead to helical nucleation on a hydrophobic surface. The hydrophobic surface could anchor such residues, whereas the peptide sequence grows in a helical configuration that is stabilized by hydrogen bonds among carbonyl and amido NH groups along the peptidyl backbone of the helix, and by other intercycle interactions among amino acid side chains. Such bound, helical structures might protect peptides from proteases and/or facilitate transport to a MHC-containing compartment and thus be reflected in the selection of T cell-presented segments. Helical structure in a series of HPLC-purified peptides was estimated from circular dichroism measurements in: 1) 0.01 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, 2) that buffer with 45% trifluoroethanol (TFE), and 3) that buffer with di-O-hexadecyl phosphatidylcholine vesicles. By decreasing the dielectric constant of the buffer, TFE enhances intrapeptide interactions generally, whereas the lipid vesicles only provide a surface for hydrophobic interactions. The peptides varied in their strip-of-helix hydrophobicity indices (SOHHI; the mean Kyte-Doolittle hydrophobicities of residues in an axial strip of an alpha helix) and in proline content. Structural order for peptides with helical circular dichroism spectra was estimated as percentage helicity from circular dichroism theta 222 nm values and peptide concentration. A prototypic alpha helical peptide with three cycles plus two amino acids and an axial hydrophobic strip of four leucyl residues (SOHHI = 3.8) was disordered in phosphate buffer, 58% helical in that buffer with 48% TFE, and 36% helical in that buffer with vesicles. Percentage helicity in the presence of vesicles of the subset of peptides without proline followed their SOHHI values. Peptides with multiple prolyl residues had circular dichroism spectra with strong signals, but since they did not have altered spectra in the presence of vesicles relative to phosphate buffer alone, the hydrophobic surface of the vesicle did not appear to stabilize those structures.  相似文献   

6.
Interaction of the pore-forming antibiotic alamethicin with small unilamellar vesicles of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine has been studied by means of circular dichroism. The data strongly suggest that alamethicin does not bind to the surface of the vesicles but incorporates into the lipid phase to a fairly large extent. Furthermore, aggregation of the peptide in the membrane is apparent from the existence of a 'critical concentration'. Quantitative evaluation and interpretation of the data rest on a quite generally applicable thermodynamic analysis. The underlying phenomenon is treated in terms of a partition equilibrium between the aqueous and lipid media. In the bilayer phase non-ideal interactions (described by appropriate activity coefficients) as well as aggregate formation are considered. Using this approach the relevant parameters of the alamethicin-lipid system have been determined (yielding, in particular, a partition coefficient of 1.3 X 10(3) for the monomeric peptide and a critical aqueous concentration of 2.5 microM). Finally, the possible relevance of these results for the voltage-dependent gating of alamethicin is briefly pointed out.  相似文献   

7.
The four-helical immunity protein Im7 folds through an on-pathway intermediate that has a specific, but partially misfolded, hydrophobic core. In order to gain further insight into the structure of this species, we have identified the backbone hydrogen bonds formed in the ensemble by measuring the amide exchange rates (under EX2 conditions) of the wild-type protein and a variant, I72V. In this mutant the intermediate is significantly destabilised relative to the unfolded state (deltadeltaG(ui) = 4.4 kJ/mol) but the native state is only slightly destabilised (deltadeltaG(nu) = 1.8 kJ/mol) at 10 degrees C in 2H2O, pH* 7.0 containing 0.4 M Na2SO4, consistent with the view that this residue forms significant non-native stabilising interactions in the intermediate state. Comparison of the hydrogen exchange rates of the two proteins, therefore, enables the state from which hydrogen exchange occurs to be identified. The data show that amides in helices I, II and IV in both proteins exchange slowly with a free energy similar to that associated with global unfolding, suggesting that these helices form highly protected hydrogen-bonded helical structure in the intermediate. By contrast, amides in helix III exchange rapidly in both proteins. Importantly, the rate of exchange of amides in helix III are slowed substantially in the Im7* variant, I72V, compared with the wild-type protein, whilst other amides exchange more rapidly in the mutant protein, in accord with the kinetics of folding/unfolding measured using chevron analysis. These data demonstrate, therefore, that local fluctuations do not dominate the exchange mechanism and confirm that helix III does not form stable secondary structure in the intermediate. By combining these results with previously obtained Phi-values, we show that the on-pathway folding intermediate of Im7 contains extensive, stable hydrogen-bonded structure in helices I, II and IV, and that this structure is stabilised by both native and non-native interactions involving amino acid side-chains in these helices.  相似文献   

8.
The ion currents induced by alamethicin were investigated in unilamellar vesicles using electron paramagnetic resonance probe techniques. The peptide induced currents were examined as a function of the membrane bound peptide concentration, and as a function of the transmembrane electrical potential. Because of the favorable partitioning of alamethicin to membranes and the large membrane area to aqueous volume in vesicle suspensions, these measurements could be carried out under conditions where all the alamethicin was membrane bound. Over the concentration range examined, the peptide induced conductances increased approximately with the fourth power of the membrane bound peptide concentration, indicating a channel molecularity of four. When the alamethicin induced currents were examined as a function of voltage, they exhibited a superlinear behavior similar to that seen in planar bilayers. Evidence for the voltage-dependent conduction of alamethicin was also observed in the time dependence of vesicle depolarization. These observations indicate that the voltage-dependent behavior of alamethicin can occur in the absence of a voltage-dependent phase partitioning. That is, a voltage-dependent conformational rearrangement for membrane bound alamethicin leads to a voltage-dependent activity.  相似文献   

9.
A Yee  B Szymczyna  J D O'Neil 《Biochemistry》1999,38(20):6489-6498
Alamethicin is a 20 amino acid antibiotic peptide produced by the soil fungus Trichoderma viride. The peptide inserts into bacterial membranes and self-associates to form ion channels, but the details of this process are unknown. Residue-specific acid- and base-catalyzed exchange data were obtained for 16 of 18 backbone amides of alamethicin dissolved in sodium dodecyl sulfate micelles using high-resolution 2-dimensional heteronuclear nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. To facilitate interpretation of the exchange data, we synthesized N-acetyl-alpha-aminoisobutyric acid-N'-methyl and N-acetyl-alanine-N'-methyl and measured the pD dependence of their hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates to determine the sequence-dependent inductive and steric effects of the alpha-aminoisobutyric acid residue. Intramolecular H-bonding in alamethicin was monitored through the exchange parameters kmin (minimum exchange rate) which indicate that the backbone is significantly more stable than the backbones of alanine-based helical peptides. Rapid exchange at Gly-11 suggests a highly local conformational flexibility in the middle of the peptide. Interactions with the detergent micelle were revealed by the exchange parameters pDmin (pD of minimum exchange) which suggest that the N-terminus of alamethicin interacts more strongly with the detergent micelle than does the C-terminus. A periodicity in pDmin difference data reveals that one surface of the helix interacts more strongly with the micelle. The surface consists of residues 1, 5, 9, 13, 16, and 20. The opposite face of the helix contains several polar residues (two glutamines and a glycine), suggesting that, on average, this face of the helix is directed toward the solvent. These results serve as a model for the interaction of the peptide with membranes containing anionic lipid. In combination with published molecular dynamics simulations [Gibbs et al. (1997) Biophys. J. 72, 2490-2495], the present results also offer insight into the mechanisms of hydrogen-deuterium exchange in helical peptides.  相似文献   

10.
Exendin-4 is a natural, 39-residue peptide first isolated from the salivary secretions of a Gila Monster (Heloderma suspectum) that has some pharmacological properties similar to glucagon-like-peptide-1 (GLP-1). This paper reports differences in the structural preferences of these two peptides. For GLP-1 in aqueous buffer (pH 3.5 or 5.9), the concentration dependence of circular dichroism spectra suggests that substantial helicity results only as a consequence of helix bundle formation. In contrast, exendin-4 is significantly helical in aqueous buffer even at the lowest concentration examined (2.3 microM). The pH dependence of the helical signal for exendin-4 indicates that helicity is enhanced by a more favorable sequence alignment of oppositely charged sidechains. Both peptides become more helical upon addition of either lipid micelles or fluoroalcohols. The stabilities of the helices were assessed from the thermal gradient of ellipticity (partial differential theta(221)/partial differential T values); on this basis, the exendin helix does not melt appreciably until temperatures significantly above ambient. The extent of helix formation for exendin-4 in aqueous buffer (and the thermal stability of the resulting helix) suggests the presence of a stable helix-capping interaction which was localized to the C-terminal segment by NMR studies of NH exchange protection. Solvent effects on the thermal stability of the helix indicate that the C-terminal capping interaction is hydrophobic in nature. The absence of this C-capping interaction and the presence of a flexible, helix-destabilizing glycine at residue 16 in GLP-1 are the likely causes of the greater fragility of the monomeric helical state of GLP-1. The intramolecular hydrophobic clustering in exendin-4 also appears to decrease the extent of helical aggregate formation.  相似文献   

11.
Alamethicin is a 20-amino-acid peptide that produces a voltage-dependent conductance in membranes. We investigated the state of aggregation of alamethicin in egg phosphatidylcholine and dioleoylphosphatidylcholine membranes by examining the EPR spectra obtained from an active analog of this peptide that is spin-labeled at its C-terminus. The dependence of both the linewidth and signal intensity as a function of peptide concentration exhibit exchange broadening as the peptide concentration is increased; however, the exchange rates are linear with peptide concentration as is expected for the simple diffusion of monomers. In addition, the spin-exchange rates obtained from the linebroadening are consistent with collisional rates that are predicted from free Brownian diffusion. The results provide strong evidence that in the absence of a membrane potential, alamethicin is largely monomeric in these membranes.  相似文献   

12.
Lewis JR  Cafiso DS 《Biochemistry》1999,38(18):5932-5938
The aqueous-membrane partitioning of alamethicin, a voltage-gated channel-forming peptide, was measured as a function of the membrane spontaneous curvature. EPR spectroscopy was used to measure the partitioning of the peptide in lipid compositions formed from dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) and varied percentages of dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE), dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine-N-methyl (DOPE-Me), or dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine-N,N-dimethyl (DOPE-Me2). When the mole fraction of DOPE in mixtures of DOPC/DOPE is increased the binding of alamethicin decreases, and the increase in binding free energy is found to be linearly dependent upon the mole fraction of DOPE in the mixture. Addition of DOPE-Me or DOPE-Me2 also increases the binding free energy, except that the effect is reduced relative to that of DOPE. The free-energy increase per mole fraction of DOPE was found to be 1400 cal/mol, whereas for DOPE-Me and DOPE-Me2 the free-energy changes were 980 and 630 cal/mol, respectively. When the free-energy changes for alamethicin binding are compared with the previously determined spontaneous curvatures for mixtures of DOPC/DOPE and DOPC/DOPE-Me, the free energy of binding is found to be linearly dependent upon the spontaneous curvature of the bilayer lipids. The effects of membrane lipid unsaturation on the partitioning of alamethicin were also measured and are qualitatively consistent with this conclusion. The sensitivity to spontaneous curvature and the cooperativity that is seen in the binding curves for alamethicin are postulated to be a result of a localized thinning of the bilayer promoted by this peptide.  相似文献   

13.
In this work, we present a structural characterization of the putative fusion peptide E2(279-298) corresponding to the E2 envelope protein of the HGV/GBV-C virus by (1)H NMR, CD and MD studies performed in H(2)O/TFE and in lipid model membranes. The peptide is largely unstructured in water, whereas in H(2)O/TFE and in model membranes it adopts an helical structure (approximately 65-70%). The partitioning free energy DeltaG ranges from -6 to -7.5 kcal mol(-1). OCD measurements on peptide-containing hydrated and oriented lipid multilayers showed that the peptide adopts a predominantly surface orientation. The (1)H NMR data (observed NOEs, deuterium exchange rates, Halpha chemical shift index and vicinal coupling constants) and the molecular dynamics calculations support the conclusions that the peptide adopts a stable helix in the C-terminal 9-18 residues slightly inserted into the lipid bilayer and a major mobility in the amino terminus of the sequence (1-8 residues).  相似文献   

14.
Molecular dynamics simulations of ion channel peptides alamethicin and melittin, solvated in methanol at 27 degrees C, were run with either regular alpha-helical starting structures (alamethicin, 1 ns; melittin 500 ps either with or without chloride counterions), or with the x-ray crystal coordinates of alamethicin as a starting structure (1 ns). The hydrogen bond patterns and stabilities were characterized by analysis of the dynamics trajectories with specified hydrogen bond angle and distance criteria, and were compared with hydrogen bond patterns and stabilities previously determined from high-resolution NMR structural analysis and amide hydrogen exchange measurements in methanol. The two alamethicin simulations rapidly converged to a persistent hydrogen bond pattern with a high level of 3(10) hydrogen bonding involving the amide NH's of residues 3, 4, 9, 15, and 18. The 3(10) hydrogen bonds stabilizing amide NH's of residues C-terminal to P2 and P14 were previously proposed to explain their high amide exchange stabilities. The absence, or low levels of 3(10) hydrogen bonds at the N-terminus or for A15 NH, respectively, in the melittin simulations, is also consistent with interpretations from amide exchange analysis. Perturbation of helical hydrogen bonding in the residues before P14 (Aib10-P14, alamethicin; T11-P14, melittin) was characterized in both peptides by variable hydrogen bond patterns that included pi and gamma hydrogen bonds. The general agreement in hydrogen bond patterns determined in the simulations and from spectroscopic analysis indicates that with suitable conditions (including solvent composition and counterions where required), local hydrogen-bonded secondary structure in helical peptides may be predicted from dynamics simulations from alpha-helical starting structures. Each peptide, particularly alamethicin, underwent some large amplitude structural fluctuations in which several hydrogen bonds were cooperatively broken. The recovery of the persistent hydrogen bonding patterns after these fluctuations demonstrates the stability of intramolecular hydrogen-bonded secondary structure in methanol (consistent with spectroscopic observations), and is promising for simulations on extended timescales to characterize the nature of the backbone fluctuations that underlie amide exchange from isolated helical polypeptides.  相似文献   

15.
The primary structure and conformation of the polypeptide antibiotic suzukacillin A are investigated. Suzukacillin A is isolated from the Trichoderma viride strain 1037 and exhibits membrane modifying and lysing properties similar to those of alamethicin. A combined gas chromatographic mass spectrometric analysis of the trifluoroacetylated peptide methyl esters of partial hydrolysates revealed a tentative sequence of 23 residues including 10 2-methylalanines and one phenylalaninol, which shows many fragments known from alamethicin: Ac-Aib-Pro-Val-Aib-Val-Ala-Aib-Ala-Aib-Aib-Gln-Aib-Leu-Aib-Gly-Leu-Aib-Pro-Val-Aib-Aib-Glu(Pheol)-Gln-OH. All chiral amino acids and phenylalainol have L-configuration. Ultraviolet and infrared spectroscopy, circular dichroism in various solvents and in particular 13C nuclear magnetic resonance have been used for a comparative study of suzukacillin with alamethicin. Suzukacillin has a partially alpha-helical structure and the helix content increases largely from polar to lipophilic solvents. Suzukacillin aggregates more strongly than alamethicin in aqueous medis due to a longer alpha-helical part and higher number of aliphatic residues. A part of the alpha-helix is exceptionally stabilized due to 2-methylalanine residues shielding the peptide bonds from interactions with polar solvents. In lipophilic solvents and lecithin vesicles particularly large temperature induced reductions of the high alpha-helix content are found for alamethicin. Suzukacillin shows similar temperature coefficients in lipophilic media, however, in contrast to alamethicin a more linear change in intensity of the Cotton effects is observed.  相似文献   

16.
On the pH dependence of amide proton exchange rates in proteins.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We have analyzed the pH dependencies of published amide proton exchange rates (kex) in three proteins: bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI), bull seminal plasma proteinase inhibitor IIA (BUSI IIA), and calbindin D9K. The base-catalyzed exchange rate constants (kOH) of solvent exposed amides in BPTI are lower for residues with low peptide carbonyl exposure, showing that the environment around the carbonyl oxygen influences kOH. We also examined the possible importance of an exchange mechanism that involves formations of imidic acid intermediates along chains of hydrogen-bonded peptides in the three proteins. By invoking this "relayed imidic acid exchange mechanism," which should be essentially acid-catalyzed, we can explain the surprisingly high pHmin (the pH value at which kex reaches a minimum) found for the non-hydrogen-bonded amide protons in the beta-sheet in BPTI. The successive increase of pHmin along a chain of hydrogen-bonded peptides from the free amide to the free carbonyl, observed in BPTI, can be explained as an increasing contribution of the proposed mechanism in this direction of the chain. For BUSI IIA (pH 4-5) and calbindin D9K (pH 6-7) the majority of amide protons with negative pH dependence of kex are located in chains of hydrogen-bonded peptides; this situation is shown to be consistent with the proposed mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
H Vogel 《Biochemistry》1987,26(14):4562-4572
The secondary structure of alamethicin in lipid membranes below and above the lipid phase transition temperature Tt is determined by Raman spectroscopy and circular dichroism (CD) measurements. In both cases structural data are obtained by fitting the experimental spectra by a superposition of the spectra of 15 reference proteins of known three-dimensional structure. According to the Raman experiments, in a lipid bilayer above Tt alamethicin is helical from residue 1 to 12, whereas below Tt the helix extends from residue 1 to 16. The remaining C-terminal part is nonhelical up to the end residue 20 both above and below Tt. A considerable lower helix content is derived from CD, namely, 38% and 46% above and below Tt, respectively, in agreement with several reported values for CD in the literature. It is shown that the commonly used set of CD spectra of water-soluble reference proteins is unsuitable to describe the CD spectra of alamethicin correctly. Therefore the secondary structure of alamethicin as derived from CD measurements is at the present state of analysis unreliable. In contrast to the case of alamethicin, the CD spectra of melittin in lipid membranes are correctly described by the reference protein spectra. The helix content of melittin is determined thereby to be 72% in lipid membranes above Tt and 75% below Tt. The data are in accord with a structure where the hydrophobic part of melittin adopts a bent helix as determined recently by Raman spectroscopy [Vogel, H., & J?hnig, F. (1986) Biophys. J. 50, 573]. The orientational order parameters of the helical parts of alamethicin and of melittin in a lipid membrane are deduced from the difference between a corresponding CD spectrum of a polypeptide in planar multibilayers and that in lipid vesicles. The presented method for determining helix order parameters is new and may be generally applicable to other membrane proteins. The orientation of the helical part of both polypeptides depends on the physical state of the lipid bilayer at maximal membrane hydration and in the ordered lipid state furthermore on the degree of membrane hydration. Under conditions where alamethicin and melittin are incorporated in an aggregated form in a fluid lipid membrane at maximal water content the helical segments are oriented preferentially parallel to the membrane normal. Cooling such lipid membranes to a temperature below Tt changes the orientation of the helical part of alamethicin as well as melittin toward the membrane plane.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The primary structure and conformation of the polypeptide antibiotic suzukacillin A are investigated. Suzukacillin A isolated from the Trichoderma viride strain 1037 and exhibits membrane modifying and lysing properties similar to those of alamethicin.A combined gas chromatographic mass spectrometric analysis of the trifluoroacetylated peptide methyl esters of partial hydrolysates revealed a tentative sequence of 23 residues including 10 2-methylalanines and one phenylalaninol, which shows many fragments known from alamethicin: Ac-Aib-Pro-Val-Aib-Val-Ala-Aib-Ala-Aib-Aib-Gln-Aib-Leu-Aib-Gly-Leu-Aib-Pro-Val-Aib-Aib-Glu(Pheol)-Gln-OH. All chiral amino acids and phenylalaninol have l-configuration. Ultraviolet and infrared spectroscopy, circular dichroism in various solvents and in particular 13C nuclear magnetic resonance have been used for a comparative study of suzukacillin with alamethicin. Suzukacillin has a partially α-helical structure and the helix content increases largely from polar to lipophilic solvents. Suzukacillin aggregates more strongly than alamethicin in aqueous media due to a longer α-helical part and higher number of aliphatic residues. A part of the α-helix is exceptionally stabilized due to 2-methylalanine residues shielding the peptide bonds from interactions with polar solvents. In lipophilic solvents and lecithin vesicles particularly large temperature induced reductions of the high α-helix content are found for alamethicin. Suzukacillin shows similar temperature coefficients in lipophilic media, however, in contrast to alamethicin a more linear change in intensity of the Cotton effects is observed.  相似文献   

19.
Wimley WC  White SH 《Biochemistry》2000,39(15):4432-4442
Direct measurement of the free energies of transfer of hydrophobic membrane-spanning alpha-helices from water to membranes is important for the determination of an accurate experiment-based hydrophobicity scale for membrane proteins. An important objective of such a scale is to account for the presently unknown thermodynamic cost of partitioning hydrogen-bonded peptide bonds into the membrane hydrocarbon core. We describe here the physical properties of a transmembrane (TM) peptide, TMX-1, designed to test the feasibility of engineering peptides that spontaneously insert across bilayers but that have the important property of measurable monomeric water solubility. TMX-1, Ac-WNALAAVAAAL-AAVAAALAAVAAGKSKSKS-NH(2), is a 31-residue sequence with a 21-residue nonpolar core, N- and C-caps to favor helix formation, and a highly polar C-terminus to improve solubility and to control directionality of insertion into lipid vesicles. TMX-1 appeared to be soluble in water up to a concentration of at least 1 mg/mL (0.3 mM). However, fluorescence spectroscopy, fluorescence quenching, and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy indicated that the high solubility was due to the formation of molecular aggregates that persisted at peptide concentrations down to at least 0.1 microM peptide. Nevertheless, aqueous TMX-1 partitioned strongly into membrane vesicles with apparent mole-fraction free-energy values of -7.1 kcal mol(-1) for phosphatidylcholine (POPC) vesicles and -8.2 kcal mol(-1) for phosphatidylglycerol (POPG) vesicles. CD spectroscopy of TMX-1 in oriented multilayers formed from either lipid disclosed a very strong preference for a transmembrane alpha-helical conformation. When TMX-1 was added to preformed vesicles, it was fully helical. A novel fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) method demonstrated that at least 50% of the TMX-1 insered spontaneously across the vesicle membranes. Binding and insertion were found to be fully reversible for POPC vesicles but not POPG vesicles. TMX-1 was thus found to have many of the properties required for thermodynamic measurements of TM peptide insertion. Importantly, the results obtained delineate the experimental problems that must be considered in the design of peptides that can partition spontaneously and reversibly as monomers into and across membranes. Our success with TMX-1 suggests that these problems are not insurmountable.  相似文献   

20.
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