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Hemin and bile pigments are the secondary structure regulators of intrinsically disordered antimicrobial peptides
Authors:Ferenc Zsila  Tünde Juhász  Szilvia B?sze  Kata Horváti  Tamás Beke‐Somfai
Institution:1. Biomolecular Self‐Assembly Group, Institute of Materials and Environmental Chemistry, Research Centre for Natural Sciences, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary;2. MTA‐ELTE Research Group of Peptide Chemistry, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, E?tv?s Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary
Abstract:The interaction of protoporphyrin compounds of human origin with the major bee venom component melittin (26 a.a., Z +6) and its hybrid derivative (CM15, 15 a.a., Z +6) were studied by a combination of various spectroscopic methods. Throughout a two‐state, concentration‐dependent process, hemin and its metabolites (biliverdin, bilirubin, bilirubin ditaurate) increase the parallel β‐sheet content of the natively unfolded melittin, suggesting the oligomerization of the peptide chains. In contrast, α‐helix promoting effect was observed with the also disordered but more cationic CM15. According to fluorescence quenching experiments, the sole Trp residue of melittin is the key player during the binding, in the vicinity of which the first pigment molecule is accommodated presumably making indole‐porphyrin π‐π stacking interaction. As circular dichroism titration data suggest, cooperative association of additional ligands subsequently occurs, resulting in multimeric complexes with an apparent dissociation constant ranged from 20 to 65 μM. Spectroscopic measurements conducted with the bilirubin catabolite urobilin and stercobilin refer to the requirement of intact dipyrrinone moieties for inducing secondary structure transformations. The binding topography of porphyrin rings on a model parallel β‐sheet motif was evaluated by absorption spectroscopy and computational modeling showing a slipped‐cofacial binding mode responsible for the red shift and hypochromism of the Soret band. Our results may aid to recognize porphyrin‐responsive binding motifs of biologically relevant, intrinsically disordered peptides and proteins, where transient conformations play a vital role in their functions.
Keywords:bilirubin  biliverdin  circular dichroism spectroscopy  CM15  fluorescence quenching  hemin  intrinsic disorder  melittin
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