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1.
The lipid monolayer model membrane is useful for studying the parameters responsible for protein and peptide membrane binding. Different approaches have been used to determine the extent of protein and peptide binding to lipid monolayers. This review focuses on the use of the “maximum insertion pressure” (MIP) to estimate the extent of protein and peptide penetration in lipid monolayers. The MIP data obtained with different proteins and peptides have been reviewed and discussed which allowed to draw conclusions on the parameters modulating the monolayer binding of proteins and peptides. In particular, secondary structure components such as amphipathic α-helices of proteins and peptides as well as electrostatic interactions play important roles in monolayer binding. The MIPs have been compared to the estimated lateral pressure of biomembranes which allowed to evaluate the possible association between proteins or peptides with natural membranes. For example, the MIP of a membrane-anchored protein with a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) was found to be far below the estimated lateral pressure of biomembranes. This allowed us to conclude that this protein is probably unable to penetrate the membrane and should thus be hanged at the membrane surface by use of its GPI lipid anchor. Moreover, the values of MIP obtained with myristoylated and non-myristoylated forms of calcineurin suggest that the myristoyl group does not contribute to monolayer binding. However, the acylation of a peptide resulted in a large increase of MIP. Finally, the physical state of lipid monolayers can have a strong effect on the values of MIP such that it is preferable to perform measurements with lipids showing a single physical state. Altogether the data show that the measurement of the maximum insertion pressure provides very useful information on the membrane binding properties of proteins and peptides although uncertainties must be provided to make sure the observed differences are significant.  相似文献   

2.
The spider peptide GsMTx4, at saturating concentration of 5 μM, is an effective and specific inhibitor for stretch-activated mechanosensitive (MS) channels found in a variety of eukaryotic cells. Although the structure of the peptide has been solved, the mode of action remains to be determined. Because of its amphipathic structure, the peptide is proposed to interact with lipids at the boundaries of the MS channel proteins. In addition, GsMTx4 has antimicrobial effects, inhibiting growth of several species of bacteria in the range of 5–64 μM. Previous studies on prokaryotic MS channels, which serve as model systems to explore the principle of MS channel gating, have shown that various amphipathic compounds acting at the protein–lipid interface affect MS channel gating. We have therefore analyzed the effect of different concentrations of extracellular GsMTx4 on MS channels of small conductance, MscS and MscK, in the cytoplasmic membrane of wild-type E. coli spheroplasts using the patch-clamp technique. Our study shows that the peptide GsMTx4 exhibits a biphasic response in which peptide concentration determines inhibition or potentiation of activity in prokaryotic MS channels. At low peptide concentrations of 2 and 4 μM the gating of the prokaryotic MS channels was hampered, manifested by a decrease in pressure sensitivity. In contrast, application of peptide at concentrations of 12 and 20 μM facilitated prokaryotic MS channel opening by increasing the pressure sensitivity.  相似文献   

3.
Basic amino acids play a key role in the binding of membrane associated proteins to negatively charged membranes. However, side chains of basic amino acids like lysine do not only provide a positive charge, but also a flexible hydrocarbon spacer that enables hydrophobic interactions. We studied the influence of hydrophobic contributions to the binding by varying the side chain length of pentapeptides with ammonium groups starting with lysine to lysine analogs with shorter side chains, namely ornithine (Orn), α,γ-diaminobutyric acid (Dab) and α, β-diaminopropionic acid (Dap). The binding to negatively charged phosphatidylglycerol (PG) membranes was investigated by calorimetry, FT-infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) and monolayer techniques. The binding was influenced by counteracting and sometimes compensating contributions. The influence of the bound peptides on the lipid phase behavior depends on the length of the peptide side chains. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) experiments showed exothermic and endothermic effects compensating to a different extent as a function of side chain length. The increase in lipid phase transition temperature was more significant for peptides with shorter side chains. FTIR-spectroscopy revealed changes in hydration of the lipid bilayer interface after peptide binding. Using monolayer techniques, the contributions of electrostatic and hydrophobic effects could clearly be observed. Peptides with short side chains induced a pronounced decrease in surface pressure of PG monolayers whereas peptides with additional hydrophobic interactions decreased the surface pressure much less or even lead to an increase, indicating insertion of the hydrophobic part of the side chain into the lipid monolayer.  相似文献   

4.
The amino terminus of subunit-2 of influenza virus hemagglutinin (NHA2) plays a crucial role in the induction of fusion between viral and endosomal membranes leading to the infection of a cell. Three synthetic analogs with an amino acid sequence corresponding to NHA2 of variant hemagglutinins were studied in a monolayer set up. Comparison of the interaction of a fusion-active and two fusion-defective analogs with a lipid monolayer revealed a greater surface activity of the fusion-active analog. Pronounced differences were found if the pure peptides were spread at the air/water interface; the fusion-active analog showed a higher collapse pressure and a greater limiting molecular area. Circular dichroism measurements on collected lipid monolayers indicated a high content of alpha-helical structure for the fusion-active and one of the fusion-defective analogs. A simple relation between alpha-helical content and fusogenicity does not seem to exist. Instead, the extent of penetration, a defined tertiary structure or orientation of the alpha-helical peptide may be essential for its membrane perturbing activity.  相似文献   

5.
The interaction of three bioactive peptides, bombesin, beta-endorphin, and glucagon with a phosphatidylcholine monolayer that was immobilized to porous silica particles and packed into a stainless steel column cartridge, has been studied using dynamic elution techniques. This immobilized lipid monolayer provides a biophysical model system with which to study the binding of peptides to a lipid membrane. In particular, the influence of temperature and methanol concentration on the affinity of each peptide for the immobilized lipid surface was assessed. For all test peptides, nonlinear retention plots were observed at all temperatures that contrasted sharply with the simple linear plots observed for the small unstructured control molecules N-acetyltryptophanamide and diphenylalanine. An analysis of the thermodynamics of the interaction of peptides with the immobilized monolayer was also carried out. The results revealed that while the peptides interacted with the monolayer predominantly through hydrophobic interactions, the relative contribution of DeltaH(assoc)(O) and DeltaS(assoc)(O) to the overall free energy of association was dependent on the temperature and methanol concentration. In particular, it was evident that under most conditions, the binding of the peptides to the immobilized lipid monolayer was enthalpy-driven, i.e., mediated by nonclassical hydrophobic interactions. Significant band-broadening and asymmetric and split peaks were also observed for bombesin, beta-endorphin, and glucagon at different temperatures and methanol concentrations. These changes in affinity and peak shape are consistent with the formation of multiple conformational species during the interaction of these peptides with the lipid monolayer. In addition, the binding behavior of the three test peptides on an n-octylsilica surface that lacked the phospho headgroups of the phospholipid was significantly different from that observed with the immobilized phosphatidylcholine surface, indicating a specificity of interaction between the peptides and the lipid surface. Overall, these experimental results demonstrate that the biomimetic phosphatidylcholine monolayer provides a stable and sensitive system with which to explore the molecular mechanism of peptide conformational changes during membrane interactions.  相似文献   

6.
Recent studies of several ICK ion-channel blockers suggest that lipid bilayer interactions play a prominent role in their actions. Structural similarities led to the hypothesis that bilayer interactions are important for the entire ICK family. We have tested this hypothesis by performing direct measurements of the free energy of bilayer partitioning (DeltaG) of several peptide blockers using our novel quenching-enhanced fluorescence titration protocol. We show that various ICK peptides demonstrate markedly different modes of interaction with large unilamellar lipid vesicles. The mechanosensitive channel blocker, GsMTx4, and its active diastereomeric analog, D-GsMTx4, bind strongly to both anionic and zwitterionic membranes. One potassium channel gating modifier, rHpTx2gs, interacts negligibly with both types of vesicles at physiological pH, whereas another, SGTx1, interacts only with anionic lipids. The slope of DeltaG dependence on surface potential is very shallow for both GsMTx4 and D-GsMTx4, indicating complex interplay of their hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions with lipid. In contrast, a cell-volume regulator, GsMTx1, and SGTx1 exhibit a very steep DeltaG dependence on surface potential, resulting in a strong binding only for membranes rich in anionic lipids. The high variability of 5 kcal/mole in observed DeltaG shows that bilayer partitioning is not a universal property of the ICK peptides interacting with ion channels.  相似文献   

7.
Our recent molecular dynamics simulation study of hanatoxin 1 (HaTx1), a gating modifier that binds to the voltage sensor of K(+) channels, has shown that HaTx1 has the ability to interact with carbonyl oxygen atoms of both leaflets of the lipid bilayer membrane and to be located at a deep position within the membrane. Here we performed a similar study of GsMTx4, a stretch-activated channels inhibitor, belonging to the same peptide family as HaTx1. Both toxins have an ellipsoidal shape, a belt of positively charged residues around the periphery, and a hydrophobic protrusion. Results show that, like HaTx1, GsMTx4 can interact with the membrane in two different ways. When all the positively charged residues interact with the outer leaflet lipid, GsMTx4 can assume a shallow binding mode. On the other hand, when the electrostatic interaction brings the positively charged groups of K-8 and K-28 into the vicinity of the carbonyl oxygen atoms of the inner leaflet lipids, the system exhibits a deep binding mode. This deep mode is accompanied by local membrane thinning. For both HaTx1 and GsMTx4, our mean force measurement analyses show that the deep binding mode is energetically favored over the shallow mode when a DPPC (dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine) membrane is used at 310 K. In contrast, when a POPC (palmitooleoyl-phosphatidylcholine) membrane is used at 310 K, the two binding modes exhibited similar stability for both toxins. Similar analyses with DPPC membrane at 330 K led to an intermediary result between the above two results. Therefore, the structure of the lipid acyl chains appears to influence the location and the dynamics of the toxins within biological membranes. We also compared the behavior of an arginine and a lysine residue within the membrane. This is of interest because the arginine residue interaction with the lipid carbonyl oxygen atoms mediates the deep binding mode for HaTx1, whereas the lysine residue plays that role for GsMTx4. The arginine residue generally shows smoother dynamics near the lipid carbonyl oxygen atoms than the lysine residue. This difference between arginine and lysine may partly account for the functional diversity of the members of the toxin family.  相似文献   

8.
Spider venom contains a number of small peptides that can control the gating properties of a wide range of ion channels with high affinity and specificity. These ion channels are responsible for coordination and control of many bodily functions such as transducing signals into sensory functions, smooth muscle contractions as well as serving as sensors in volume regulation. Hence, these peptides have been the topic of many research efforts in hopes that they can be used as biomedical therapeutics. Several peptides are known to control the gating properties of ion channels by involving the lipid membrane. GsMTx4, originally isolated from the Chilean Rose tarantula (Grammostola rosea), is known to selectively inhibit mechanosensitive ion channels by partitioning into the lipid bilayer. To further understand this indirect gating mechanism, we investigated the interactions between native GsAF2, VsTx1 and a synthetic form of GsMTx4 with model DMPC lipid bilayers using 31P solid-state NMR, 13C CP-MAS NMR, NS-TEM and cryo-TEM. The results reveal that these inhibitor cystine knot peptides perforate the DMPC lipid vesicles similarly with some subtle differences and ultimately create small spherical vesicles and anisotropic cylindrical and discoidal vesicles at concentrations near 1.0–1.5?mol% peptide. The anisotropic components align with their long axes along the NMR static B0 magnetic field, a property that should be useful in future NMR structural investigations of these systems. These findings move us forward in our understanding of how these peptides bind and interact with the lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

9.
Comparative studies of the effect of a short synthetic cationic peptide, pEM-2 (KKWRWWLKALAKK), derived from the C-terminus of myotoxin II from the venom of the snake Bothrops asper on phospholipid mono- and bilayers were performed by means of Langmuir Blodgett (LB) monolayer technique, atomic force microscopy and calcein leakage assay. Phospholipid mono- and bilayers composed of single zwitterionic or anionic phospholipids as well as lipid mixtures mimicking bacterial cell membrane were used. LB measurements indicate that the peptide binds to both anionic and zwitterionic phospholipid monolayers at low surface pressure but only to anionic at high surface pressure. Preferential interaction of the peptide with anionic phospholipid monolayer is also supported by a more pronounced change of the monolayer pressure/area isotherms induced by the peptide. AFM imaging reveals the presence of nanoscale aggregates in lipid/peptide mixture monolayers. At the same time, calcein leakage experiment demonstrated that pEM-2 induces stronger disruption of zwitterionic than anionic bilayers. Results of the study indicate that electrostatic interactions play a significant role in the initial recognition and binding of pEM-2 to the cell membrane. However, membrane rupturing activity of the peptide depends on interactions other than simple ionic attraction.  相似文献   

10.
GsMTx4 is a 34-residue peptide isolated from the tarantula Grammostola spatulata folded into an inhibitory cysteine knot and it selectively affects gating of some mechanosensitive channels. Here we report the effects of cytoplasmic GsMTx4 on the two bacterial channels, MscS and MscL, in giant Escherichia coli spheroplasts. In excised inside-out patches, GsMTx4 sensitized both channels to tension by increasing the opening rate and decreasing the closing rate. With ascending and descending pressure ramps, GsMTx4 increased the gating hysteresis for MscS, a consequence of slower gating kinetics. Quantitative kinetic analysis of the primary C↔O transition showed that the hysteresis is a result of the decreased closing rate. The gating barrier location relative to the open state energy well was unaffected by GsMTx4. A reconstructed energy profile suggests that the peptide prestresses the resting state of MscS, lowering the net barrier to opening and stabilizes the open conformation by ∼8 kT. In excised patches, both MscL and MscS exhibit reversible adaptation, a process separable from inactivation for MscS. GsMTx4 decreased the rate of reversible adaptation for both channels and the MscS recovery rate from the inactivation. These measurements support a mechanism where GsMTx4 binds to the lipid interface of the channel, increasing the local stress that is sensed by the channels and stabilizing the expanded conformations.  相似文献   

11.
G Beschiaschvili  J Seelig 《Biochemistry》1990,29(49):10995-11000
The binding of the cyclic somatostatin analogue SMS 201-995, (+)-D-Phe1-Cys2-Phe3-D-Trp4-(+)-Lys5-Thr6- Cys7-Thr(ol)8, to neutral and negatively charged lipids was investigated with a centrifugation assay and with electrophoretic and monolayer methods. Monolayers and bilayers were composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoglycerol (POPG), either in pure form or in a 75/25 (mol/mol) mixture. The expansion of monolayer films demonstrated the intercalation of the peptide between the lipid molecules with a surface area requirement of 135 A2 per peptide molecule, indicating a parallel alignment of the peptide long axis with the membrane surface. Above a limiting pressure of 32.5 mN/m for POPC and 38.5 mN/m for POPG, peptide penetration was no longer possible. The peptide binding isotherm could be measured for mixed POPC/POPG bilayers up to a peptide concentration of 0.5 mM. Due to electrostatic attraction, binding between the positively charged peptide and the negatively charged membrane surface was enhanced as compared to the binding to a neutral membrane. After correction for electrostatic effects by means of the Gouy-Chapman theory, the binding isotherm as well as the electrophoretic zeta-potential measurement could be described by the same partition equilibrium with a surface partition constant of Kp = 36 +/- 4 M-1 (at 0.1 M NaCl). About 60-70% of SMS 201-995 is probably embedded in the headgroup region with little penetration into the lipid core. The partition constant increases with increasing salt concentration or with decreasing lipid lateral pressure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The cytoplasmic form of protein kinase C (PKC) is inactive, probably because the pseudosubstrate region in its regulatory domain blocks the substrate-binding site in its kinase domain. Calcium ions cause a translocation to the membrane: maximum activation requires a negative lipid such as phosphatidylserine (PS) and the neutral lipid diacylglycerol (DAG) but the mechanism by which PS and DAG activate PKC is unknown. Pseudosubstrate region 19-36 of PKC-beta has six basic and one acidic amino acids and region 19-29 has five basic and no acidic amino acids. Since any binding of basic residues in the pseudosubstrate region to acidic lipids in the membrane should stabilize the active form of PKC, we studied how peptides with amino acids equivalent to residues 19-36 and 19-29 of PKC-beta bound to phospholipid vesicles. We made equilibrium dialysis, filtration, and electrophoretic mobility measurements. The fraction of bound peptide is a steep sigmoidal function of the mol fraction of negative lipid in the membrane, as predicted from a simple theoretical model that assumes the basic residues provide identical independent binding sites. The proportionality constant between the number of bound peptides/area and the concentration of peptide in the bulk aqueous phase is 1 micron for a membrane with 25% negative lipid formed in 0.1 M KCl. Equivalently, the association constant of the peptide with the membrane is 10(4) M-1, or the net binding energy is 6 kcal/mol. Thus the interaction of basic residues in the pseudosubstrate region with acidic lipids in the membrane could provide 6 kcal/mol free energy towards stabilizing the active form of PKC.  相似文献   

13.
The interaction between a peptide sequence from GB virus C E1 protein (E1P8) and its structural analogs (E1P8-12), (E1P8-13), and (E1P8-21) with anionic lipid membranes (POPG vesicles and POPG, DPPG or DPPC/DPPG (2:1) monolayers) and their association with HIV-1 fusion peptide (HIV-1 FP) inhibition at the membrane level were studied using biophysical methods. All peptides showed surface activity but leakage experiments in vesicles as well as insertion kinetics in monolayers and lipid/peptide miscibility indicated a low level of interaction: neither E1P8 nor its analogs induced the release of vesicular content and the exclusion pressure values (πe) were clearly lower than the biological membrane pressure (24–30 mN m 1) and the HIV-1 FP (35 mN m 1). Miscibility was elucidated in terms of the additivity rule and excess free energy of mixing (GE). E1P8, E1P8-12 and E1P8-21 (but not E1P8-13) induced expansion of the POPG monolayer. The mixing process is not thermodynamically favored as the positive GE values indicate. To determine how E1 peptides interfere in the action of HIV-1 FP at the membrane level, mixed monolayers of HIV-1 FP/E1 peptides (2:1) and POPG were obtained. E1P8 and its derivative E1P8-21 showed the greatest HIV-1 FP inhibition. The LC-LE phase lipid behavior was morphologically examined via fluorescence microscopy (FM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Images revealed that the E1 peptides modify HIV-1 FP–lipid interaction. This fact may be attributed to a peptide/peptide interaction as indicated by AFM results. Finally, hemolysis assay demonstrated that E1 peptides inhibit HIV-1 FP activity.  相似文献   

14.
We studied the interaction of the cell-penetrating peptide penetratin with mixed dioleoylphosphatidylcholine/dioleoylphoshatidylglycerol (DOPC/DOPG) unilamellar vesicles as a function of the molar fraction of anionic lipid, X(PG), by means of isothermal titration calorimetry. The work was aimed at getting a better understanding of factors that affect the peptide binding to lipid membranes and its permeation through the bilayer. The binding was well described by a surface partitioning equilibrium using an effective charge of the peptide of z(P) approximately 5.1 +/- 0.5. The peptide first binds to the outer surface of the vesicles, the effective binding capacity of which increases with X(PG). At X(PG) approximately 0.5 and a molar ratio of bound peptide-to-lipid of approximately 1/20 the membranes become permeable and penetratin binds also to the inner monolayer after internalization. The results were rationalized in terms of an "electroporation-like" mechanism, according to which the asymmetrical distribution of the peptide between the outer and inner surfaces of the charged bilayer causes a transmembrane electrical field, which alters the lateral and the curvature stress acting within the membrane. At a threshold value these effects induce internalization of penetratin presumably via inversely curved transient structures.  相似文献   

15.
Research on antimicrobial peptides is in part driven by urgent medical needs such as the steady increase in pathogens being resistant to antibiotics. Despite the wealth of information compelling structure–function relationships are still scarce and thus the interfacial activity model has been proposed to bridge this gap. This model also applies to other interfacially active (membrane active) peptides such as cytolytic, cell penetrating or antitumor peptides. One parameter that is strongly linked to interfacial activity is the spontaneous lipid curvature, which is experimentally directly accessible. We discuss different parameters such as H-bonding, electrostatic repulsion, changes in monolayer surface area and lateral pressure that affect induction of membrane curvature, but also vice versa how membrane curvature triggers peptide response. In addition, the impact of membrane lipid composition on the formation of curved membrane structures and its relevance for diverse mode of action of interfacially active peptides and in turn biological activity are described. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Interfacially Active Peptides and Proteins. Guest Editors: William C. Wimley and Kalina Hristova.  相似文献   

16.
Influenza infection requires fusion between the virus envelope and a host cell endosomal membrane. The influenza hemagglutinin fusion peptide (FP) is essential to viral membrane fusion. It was recently proposed that FPs would fuse membranes by increasing lipid tail protrusion, a membrane fusion transition state. The details of how FPs induce lipid tail protrusion, however, remain to be elucidated. To decipher the molecular mechanism by which FPs promote lipid tail protrusion, we performed molecular dynamics simulations of the wild‐type (WT) FP, fusogenic mutant F9A, and nonfusogenic mutant W14A in model bilayers. This article presents the peptide–lipid interaction responsible for lipid tail protrusion and a related lipid perturbation, polar head intrusion, where polar heads are sunk under the membrane surface. The backbone amides from the four N‐terminal peptide residues, deeply inserted in the membrane, promoted both perturbations through H bonding with lipid phosphates. Polar head intrusion correlated with peptides N‐terminal insertion depth and activity: the N‐termini of WT and F9A were inserted deeper into the membrane than nonfusogenic W14A. Based on these results, we propose that FP‐induced polar head intrusion would complement lipid tail protrusion in catalyzing membrane fusion by reducing repulsions between juxtaposed membranes headgroups. The presented model provides a framework for further research on membrane fusion and influenza antivirals. Proteins 2014; 82:2118–2127. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
The membrane-binding properties of a class A amphipathic peptide (18D) were investigated using two different immobilized model membrane systems. The first system involved the use of surface plasmon resonance (SPR) to study the binding of 18D to dimyristylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and dimyristylphosphatidylglycerol (DMPG), which allowed peptide binding to be monitored in real time. The SPR experiments indicated stronger binding of 18D to DMPG than DMPC, which kinetic analysis revealed was due to a faster on-rate. The second model membrane system involved immobilized membrane chromatography in which the binding of 18D to either DMPC or DMPG monolayers covalently linked to silica particles was analysed by elution chromatography. Stronger binding affinity of 18D was also obtained with the negatively charged phosphatidylglycerol (PG) monolayer compared to the phosphatidylcholine (PC) monolayer, which was consistent with the SPR results. Non-linear binding behaviour of 18D to the immobilized lipid monolayers was also observed, which suggests that the peptide undergoes conformational and orientational changes upon binding to the immobilized PC and PG ligands. Significant band broadening was also observed on both monolayers, with larger bandwidths obtained on the PC surface, indicating slower binding and orientation kinetics with the zwitterionic surface. The dependence of logk' on the percentage of methanol also demonstrated a bimodal interaction whereby hydrophobic forces predominated at higher temperatures and methanol concentrations, while at lower temperatures, electrostatic and other polar forces also made a contribution to the affinity of the peptides for the lipid monolayer particularly. Overall, these results demonstrate the complementary use of these two lipid biosensors which allows the role of hydrophobic and electrostatic forces in peptide–membrane interactions to be studied and insight gained into the kinetic factors associated with these interactions.  相似文献   

18.
Enkephalins (Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Met/Leu) are opioid peptides with proven antinociceptive action in organism. They interact with opioid receptors belonging to G-protein coupled receptor superfamily. It is known that these receptors are located preferably in membrane rafts composed mainly of sphingomyelin (Sm), cholesterol (Cho), and phosphatidylcholine. In the present work, using Langmuir’s monolayer technique in combination with Wilhelmy’s method for measuring the surface pressure, the interaction of synthetic methionine–enkephalin and its amidated derivative with 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC), Sm, and Cho, as well as with their double and triple mixtures, was studied. From the pressure/area isotherms measured, the compressional moduli of the lipids and lipid–peptide monolayers were determined. Our results showed that the addition of the synthetic enkephalins to the monolayers studied led to change in the lipid monolayers characteristics, which was more evident in enkephalinamide case. In addition, using Brewster angle microscopy (BAM), the surface morphology of the lipid monolayers, before and after the injection of both enkephalins, was determined. The BAM images showed an increase in surface density of the mixed surface lipids/enkephalins films, especially with double and triple component lipid mixtures. This effect was more pronounced for the enkephalinamide as well. These observations showed that there was an interaction between the peptides and the raft-forming lipids, which was stronger for the amidated peptide, suggesting a difference in folding of both enkephalins. Our research demonstrates the potential of lipid monolayers for elegant and simple membrane models to study lipid–peptide interactions at the plane of biomembranes.  相似文献   

19.
The indiscriminate use of conventional antibiotics is leading to an increase in the number of resistant bacterial strains, motivating the search for new compounds to overcome this challenging problem. Antimicrobial peptides, acting only in the lipid phase of membranes without requiring specific membrane receptors as do conventional antibiotics, have shown great potential as possible substituents of these drugs. These peptides are in general rich in basic and hydrophobic residues forming an amphipathic structure when in contact with membranes. The outer leaflet of the prokaryotic cell membrane is rich in anionic lipids, while the surface of the eukaryotic cell is zwitterionic. Due to their positive net charge, many of these peptides are selective to the prokaryotic membrane. Notwithstanding this preference for anionic membranes, some of them can also act on neutral ones, hampering their therapeutic use. In addition to the electrostatic interaction driving peptide adsorption by the membrane, the ability of the peptide to perturb lipid packing is of paramount importance in their capacity to induce cell lysis, which is strongly dependent on electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions. In the present research, we revised the adsorption of antimicrobial peptides by model membranes as well as the perturbation that they induce in lipid packing. In particular, we focused on some peptides that have simultaneously acidic and basic residues. The net charges of these peptides are modulated by pH changes and the lipid composition of model membranes. We discuss the experimental approaches used to explore these aspects of lipid membranes using lipid vesicles and lipid monolayer as model membranes.  相似文献   

20.
The influence of the hydrophobic proteins SP-B and SP-C, isolated from pulmonary surfactant, on the morphology of binary monomolecular lipid films containing phosphocholine and phosphoglycerol (DPPC and DPPG) at the air-water interface has been studied using epifluorescence and dark-field microscopy. In contrast to previously published studies, the monolayer experiments used the entire hydrophobic surfactant protein fraction (containing both the SP-B and SP-C peptides) at physiologically relevant concentrations (approximately 1 wt %). Even at such low levels, the SP-B/C peptides induce the formation of a new phase in the surface monolayer that is of lower intrinsic order than the liquid condensed (LC) phase that forms in the pure lipid mixture. This presumably leads to a higher structural flexibility of the surface monolayer at high lateral pressure. Variation of the subphase pH indicates that electrostatic interaction dominates the association of the SP-B/C peptides with the lipid monolayer. As evidenced from dark-field microscopy, monolayer material is excluded from the DPPC/DPPG surface film on compression and forms three-dimensional, surface-associated structures of micron dimensions. Such exclusion bodies formed only with SP-B/C peptides. This observation provides the first direct optical evidence for the squeeze-out of pulmonary surfactant material in situ at the air-water interface upon increasing monolayer surface pressures.  相似文献   

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