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1.
Membrane model systems consisting of phosphatidylcholines and hydrophobic alpha-helical peptides with tryptophan flanking residues, a characteristic motif for transmembrane protein segments, were used to investigate the contribution of tryptophans to peptide-lipid interactions. Peptides of different lengths and with the flanking tryptophans at different positions in the sequence were incorporated in relatively thick or thin lipid bilayers. The organization of the systems was assessed by NMR methods and by hydrogen/deuterium exchange in combination with mass spectrometry. Previously, it was found that relatively short peptides induce nonlamellar phases and that relatively long analogues order the lipid acyl chains in response to peptide-bilayer mismatch. Here it is shown that these effects do not correlate with the total hydrophobic peptide length, but instead with the length of the stretch between the flanking tryptophan residues. The tryptophan indole ring was consistently found to be positioned near the lipid carbonyl moieties, regardless of the peptide-lipid combination, as indicated by magic angle spinning NMR measurements. These observations suggest that the lipid adaptations are not primarily directed to avoid a peptide-lipid hydrophobic mismatch, but instead to prevent displacement of the tryptophan side chains from the polar-apolar interface. In contrast, long lysine-flanked analogues fully associate with a bilayer without significant lipid adaptations, and hydrogen/deuterium exchange experiments indicate that this is achieved by simply exposing more (hydrophobic) residues to the lipid headgroup region. The results highlight the specific properties that are imposed on transmembrane protein segments by flanking tryptophan residues.  相似文献   

2.
The aim of this study was to gain insight into the structural consequences of hydrophobic mismatch for membrane proteins in lipid bilayers that contain cholesterol. For this purpose, tryptophan-flanked peptides, designed to mimic transmembrane segments of membrane proteins, were incorporated in model membranes of unsaturated phosphatidylcholine bilayers of varying thickness and containing varying amounts of cholesterol. Analysis of the lipid organization by (31)P NMR and cryo-TEM demonstrated the formation of an isotropic phase, most likely representing a cubic phase, which occurred exclusively in mixtures containing lipids with relatively long acyl chains. Formation of this phase was inhibited by incorporation of lysophosphatidylcholine. These results indicate that the isotropic phase is formed as a consequence of negative hydrophobic mismatch and that its formation is related to a negative membrane curvature. When either peptide or cholesterol was omitted from the mixture, isotropic-phase formation did not occur, not even when the concentrations of these compounds were significantly increased. This suggests that formation of the isotropic phase is the result of a synergistic effect between the peptides and cholesterol. Interestingly, isotropic-phase formation was not observed when the tryptophans in the peptide were replaced by either lysines or histidines. We propose a model for the mechanism of this synergistic effect, in which its dependence on the flanking residues is explained by preferential interactions between cholesterol and tryptophan residues.  相似文献   

3.
Hydrophobic mismatch arises from a difference in the hydrophobic thickness of a lipid membrane and a transmembrane protein segment, and is thought to play an important role in the folding, stability and function of membrane proteins. We have investigated the possible adaptations that lipid bilayers and transmembrane α-helices undergo in response to mismatch, using fully-atomistic molecular dynamics simulations totaling 1.4 μs. We have created 25 different tryptophan-alanine-leucine transmembrane α-helical peptide systems, each composed of a hydrophobic alanine–leucine stretch, flanked by 1–4 tryptophan side chains, as well as the β-helical peptide dimer, gramicidin A. Membrane responses to mismatch include changes in local bilayer thickness and lipid order, varying systematically with peptide length. Adding more flanking tryptophan side chains led to an increase in bilayer thinning for negatively mismatched peptides, though it was also associated with a spreading of the bilayer interface. Peptide tilting, bending and stretching were systematic, with tilting dominating the responses, with values of up to ~ 45° for the most positively mismatched peptides. Peptide responses were modulated by the number of tryptophan side chains due to their anchoring roles and distributions around the helices. Potential of mean force calculations for local membrane thickness changes, helix tilting, bending and stretching revealed that membrane deformation is the least energetically costly of all mismatch responses, except for positively mismatched peptides where helix tilting also contributes substantially. This comparison of energetic driving forces of mismatch responses allows for deeper insight into protein stability and conformational changes in lipid membranes.  相似文献   

4.
In this review we discuss recent insights obtained from well-characterized model systems into the factors that determine the orientation and tilt angles of transmembrane peptides in lipid bilayers. We will compare tilt angles of synthetic peptides with those of natural peptides and proteins, and we will discuss how tilt can be modulated by hydrophobic mismatch between the thickness of the bilayer and the length of the membrane spanning part of the peptide or protein. In particular, we will focus on results obtained on tryptophan-flanked model peptides (WALP peptides) as a case study to illustrate possible consequences of hydrophobic mismatch in molecular detail and to highlight the importance of peptide dynamics for the experimental determination of tilt angles. We will conclude with discussing some future prospects and challenges concerning the use of simple peptide/lipid model systems as a tool to understand membrane structure and function.  相似文献   

5.
Biological membranes are characterized by a heterogeneous composition, which is not only manifested in the wide variety of their components, but also in aspects like the lateral organization, topology, and conformation of proteins and lipids. In bringing about the correct membrane structure, protein-lipid interactions can be expected to play a prominent role. The extent of hydrophobic matching between transmembrane protein segments and lipids potentially constitutes a versatile director of membrane organization, because a tendency to avoid hydrophobic mismatch could result in compensating adaptations such as tilt of the transmembrane segment or segregation into distinct domains. Also, interfacial interactions between lipid headgroups and the aromatic and charged residues that typically flank transmembrane domains may act as an organizing element. In this review, we discuss the numerous model studies that have systematically explored the influence of hydrophobic matching and interfacial anchoring on membrane structure. Designed peptides consisting of a polyleucine or polyleucine/alanine hydrophobic stretch, which is flanked on both sides by tryptophan or lysine residues, reflect the general layout of transmembrane protein segments. It is shown for phosphatidylcholine bilayers and for other model membranes that these peptides adapt a transmembrane topology without extensive peptide or lipid adaptations under conditions of hydrophobic matching, but that significant rearrangements can result from hydrophobic mismatch. Moreover, these effects depend on the nature of the flanking residues, implying a modulation of the mismatch response by interfacial interactions of the flanking residues. The implications of these model studies for the organization of biomembranes are discussed in the context of recent experiments with more complex systems.  相似文献   

6.
A novel mechanism for membrane modulation of transmembrane protein structure, and consequently function, is suggested in which mismatch between the hydrophobic surface of the protein and the hydrophobic interior of the lipid bilayer induces a flexing or bending of a transmembrane segment of the protein. Studies on model hydrophobic transmembrane peptides predict that helices tilt to submerge the hydrophobic surface within the lipid bilayer to satisfy the hydrophobic effect if the helix length exceeds the bilayer width. The hydrophobic surface of transmembrane helix 1 (TM1) of lactose permease, LacY, is accessible to the bilayer, and too long to be accommodated in the hydrophobic portion of a typical lipid bilayer if oriented perpendicular to the membrane surface. Hence, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data and molecular dynamics simulations show that TM1 from LacY may flex as well as tilt to satisfy the hydrophobic mismatch with the bilayer. In an analogous study of the hydrophobic mismatch of TM7 of bovine rhodopsin, similar flexing of the transmembrane segment near the conserved NPxxY sequence is observed. As a control, NMR data on TM5 of lacY, which is much shorter than TM1, show that TM5 is likely to tilt, but not flex, consistent with the close match between the extent of hydrophobic surface of the peptide and the hydrophobic thickness of the bilayer. These data suggest mechanisms by which the lipid bilayer in which the protein is embedded modulates conformation, and thus function, of integral membrane proteins through interactions with the hydrophobic transmembrane helices.  相似文献   

7.
Biological membranes are characterized by a heterogeneous composition, which is not only manifested in the wide variety of their components, but also in aspects like the lateral organization, topology, and conformation of proteins and lipids. In bringing about the correct membrane structure, protein–lipid interactions can be expected to play a prominent role. The extent of hydrophobic matching between transmembrane protein segments and lipids potentially constitutes a versatile director of membrane organization, because a tendency to avoid hydrophobic mismatch could result in compensating adaptations such as tilt of the transmembrane segment or segregation into distinct domains. Also, interfacial interactions between lipid headgroups and the aromatic and charged residues that typically flank transmembrane domains may act as an organizing element. In this review, we discuss the numerous model studies that have systematically explored the influence of hydrophobic matching and interfacial anchoring on membrane structure. Designed peptides consisting of a polyleucine or polyleucine/alanine hydrophobic stretch, which is flanked on both sides by tryptophan or lysine residues, reflect the general layout of transmembrane protein segments. It is shown for phosphatidylcholine bilayers and for other model membranes that these peptides adapt a transmembrane topology without extensive peptide or lipid adaptations under conditions of hydrophobic matching, but that significant rearrangements can result from hydrophobic mismatch. Moreover, these effects depend on the nature of the flanking residues, implying a modulation of the mismatch response by interfacial interactions of the flanking residues. The implications of these model studies for the organization of biomembranes are discussed in the context of recent experiments with more complex systems.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the effects of the model alpha-helical transmembrane peptide Ac-K(2)L(24)K(2)-amide (L(24)) on the thermotropic phase behavior of aqueous dispersions of 1,2-dielaidoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DEPE) to understand better the interactions between lipid bilayers and the membrane-spanning segments of integral membrane proteins. We studied in particular the effect of L(24) and three derivatives thereof on the liquid-crystalline lamellar (L(alpha))-reversed hexagonal (H(II)) phase transition of DEPE model membranes by differential scanning calorimetry and (31)P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. We found that the incorporation of L(24) progressively decreases the temperature, enthalpy, and cooperativity of the L(alpha)-H(II) phase transition, as well as induces the formation of an inverted cubic phase, indicating that this transmembrane peptide promotes the formation of inverted nonlamellar phases, despite the fact that the hydrophobic length of this peptide exceeds the hydrophobic thickness of the host lipid bilayer. These characteristic effects are not altered by truncation of the side chains of the terminal lysine residues or by replacing each of the leucine residues at the end of the polyleucine core of L(24) with a tryptophan residue. Thus, the characteristic effects of these transmembrane peptides on DEPE thermotropic phase behavior are independent of their detailed chemical structure. Importantly, significantly shortening the polyleucine core of L(24) results in a smaller decrease in the L(alpha)-H(II) phase transition temperature of the DEPE matrix into which it is incorporated, and reducing the thickness of the host phosphatidylethanolamine bilayer results in a larger reduction in the L(alpha)-H(II) phase transition temperature. These results are not those predicted by hydrophobic mismatch considerations or reported in previous studies of other transmembrane alpha-helical peptides containing a core of an alternating sequence of leucine and alanine residues. We thus conclude that the hydrophobicity and conformational flexibility of transmembrane peptides can affect their propensity to induce the formation of inverted nonlamellar phases by mechanisms not primarily dependent on lipid-peptide hydrophobic mismatch.  相似文献   

9.
A novel mechanism for membrane modulation of transmembrane protein structure, and consequently function, is suggested in which mismatch between the hydrophobic surface of the protein and the hydrophobic interior of the lipid bilayer induces a flexing or bending of a transmembrane segment of the protein. Studies on model hydrophobic transmembrane peptides predict that helices tilt to submerge the hydrophobic surface within the lipid bilayer to satisfy the hydrophobic effect if the helix length exceeds the bilayer width. The hydrophobic surface of transmembrane helix 1 (TM1) of lactose permease, LacY, is accessible to the bilayer, and too long to be accommodated in the hydrophobic portion of a typical lipid bilayer if oriented perpendicular to the membrane surface. Hence, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data and molecular dynamics simulations show that TM1 from LacY may flex as well as tilt to satisfy the hydrophobic mismatch with the bilayer. In an analogous study of the hydrophobic mismatch of TM7 of bovine rhodopsin, similar flexing of the transmembrane segment near the conserved NPxxY sequence is observed. As a control, NMR data on TM5 of lacY, which is much shorter than TM1, show that TM5 is likely to tilt, but not flex, consistent with the close match between the extent of hydrophobic surface of the peptide and the hydrophobic thickness of the bilayer. These data suggest mechanisms by which the lipid bilayer in which the protein is embedded modulates conformation, and thus function, of integral membrane proteins through interactions with the hydrophobic transmembrane helices.  相似文献   

10.
To better understand the mutual interactions between lipids and membrane-spanning peptides, we investigated the effects of tryptophan-anchored hydrophobic peptides of various lengths on the phase behavior of 1,2-dielaidoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DEPE) dispersions, using (31)P nuclear magnetic resonance and small-angle X-ray diffraction. Designed alpha-helical transmembrane peptides (WALPn peptides, with n being the total number of amino acids) with a hydrophobic sequence of leucine and alanine of varying length, bordered at both ends by two tryptophan membrane anchors, were used as model peptides and were effective at low concentrations in DEPE. Incorporation of 2 mol % of relatively short peptides (WALP14-17) lowered the inverted hexagonal phase transition temperature (T(H)) of DEPE, with an efficiency that seemed to be independent of the extent of hydrophobic mismatch. However, the tube diameter of the H(II) phase induced by the peptides was clearly dependent on mismatch and decreased with shorter peptide length. Longer peptides (WALP19-27) induced a cubic phase, both below and above T(H). Incorporation of WALP27, which is significantly longer than the DEPE bilayer thickness, did not stabilize the bilayer. The longest peptide used, WALP31, hardly affected the lipid's phase behavior, and appeared not to incorporate into the bilayer. The consequences of hydrophobic mismatch between peptides and lipids are therefore more dramatic with shorter peptides. The data allow us to suggest a detailed molecular model of the mechanism by which these transmembrane peptides can affect lipid phase behavior.  相似文献   

11.
In this study, we investigated the extent to which different aromatic and positively charged side chains, which often flank transmembrane segments of proteins, can influence lipid-peptide interactions. Model systems consisting of phosphatidylcholine and hydrophobic alpha-helical peptides with different flanking residues were investigated. The peptides were incorporated in relatively thick and in relatively thin lipid bilayers to create a peptide-bilayer hydrophobic mismatch, and the compensating effects on lipid structure were analyzed. When relatively long with respect to the thickness of the bilayer, the peptides that are flanked by the aromatic side chains, Trp, Tyr, and Phe, all induce a significant ordering of the lipid acyl chains, while the peptides flanked by the charged residues Lys, Arg, and His do not. However, when the peptides are relatively short with respect to the thickness of the bilayer, their effect on lipid organization does not depend primarily on their aromatic or charged character. Peptides flanked by Trp, Tyr, Lys, or (at low pH) His residues are effective in inducing mismatch-relieving cubic and inverted hexagonal phases, while analogues flanked by Phe, Arg, or (at neutral pH) His residues cannot induce an inverted hexagonal phase. The different responses to mismatch might reflect the different interfacial affinities of the residues that were investigated.  相似文献   

12.
Recently, several indications have been found that suggest a preferential interaction between cholesterol and tryptophan residues located near the membrane-water interface. The aim of this study was to investigate by direct methods how tryptophan and cholesterol interact with each other and what the possible consequences are for membrane organization. For this purpose, we used cholesterol-containing model membranes of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) in which a transmembrane model peptide with flanking tryptophans [acetyl-GWW(LA)8LWWA-amide], called WALP23, was incorporated to mimic interfacial tryptophans of membrane proteins. These model systems were studied with two complementary methods. (1) Steady-state and time-resolved F?rster resonance energy transfer (FRET) experiments employing the fluorescent cholesterol analogue dehydroergosterol (DHE) in combination with a competition experiment with cholesterol were used to obtain information about the distribution of cholesterol in the bilayer in the presence of WALP23. The results were consistent with a random distribution of cholesterol which indicates that cholesterol and interfacial tryptophans are not preferentially located next to each other in these bilayer systems. (2) Solid-state 2H NMR experiments employing either deuterated cholesterol or indole ring-deuterated WALP23 peptides were performed to study the orientation and dynamics of both molecules. The results showed that the quadrupolar splittings of labeled cholesterol were not affected by an interaction with tryptophan-flanked peptides and, vice versa, that the quadrupolar splittings of labeled indole rings in WALP23 are not significantly influenced by addition of cholesterol to the bilayer. Therefore, both NMR and fluorescence spectroscopy results independently show that, at least in the model systems studied here, there is no evidence for a preferential interaction between cholesterol and tryptophans located at the bilayer interface.  相似文献   

13.
Harzer U  Bechinger B 《Biochemistry》2000,39(43):13106-13114
The secondary structure and alignment of hydrophobic model peptides in phosphatidylcholine membranes were investigated as a function of hydrophobic mismatch by CD and oriented proton-decoupled (15)N solid-state NMR spectroscopies. In addition, the macroscopic phase and the orientational order of the phospholipid headgroups was analyzed by proton-decoupled (31)P NMR spectroscopy. Both, variations in the composition of the polypeptide (10-30 hydrophobic residues) as well as the fatty acid acyl chain of the phospholipid (10-22 carbons) were studied. At lipid-to-peptide ratios of 50, the peptides adopt helical conformations and bilayer macroscopic phases are predominant. The peptide and lipid maintain much of their orientational order even when the peptide is calculated to be 3 A too short or 14 A too long to fit into the pure lipid bilayer. A continuous decrease in the (15)N chemical shift obtained from transmembrane peptides in oriented membranes suggests an increasing helical tilt angle when the membrane thickness is reduced. This response is, however, insufficient to account for the full hydrophobic mismatch. When the helix is much too long to span the membrane, both the lipid and the peptide order are perturbed, an indication of changes in the macroscopic properties of the membrane. In contrast, sequences that are much too short show little effect on the phospholipid headgroup order, but the peptides exhibit a wide range of orientational distributions predominantly close to parallel to the membrane surface. A thermodynamic formalism is applied to describe the two-state equilibrium between in-plane and transmembrane peptide orientations.  相似文献   

14.
Nano-electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) was used to analyze hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange properties of transmembrane peptides with varying length and composition. Synthetic transmembrane peptides were used with a general acetyl-GW(2)(LA)(n)LW(2)A-ethanolamine sequence. These peptides were incorporated in large unilamellar vesicles of 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine. The vesicles were diluted in buffered deuterium oxide, and the H/D exchange after different incubation times was directly analyzed by means of ESI-MS. First, the influence of the length of the hydrophobic Leu-Ala sequence on exchange behavior was investigated. It was shown that longer peptide analogs are more protected from H/D exchange than expected on the basis of their length with respect to bilayer thickness. This is explained by an increased protection from the bilayer environment, because of stretching of the lipid acyl chains and/or tilting of the longer peptides. Next, the role of the flanking tryptophan residues was investigated. The length of the transmembrane part that shows very slow H/D exchange was found to depend on the exact position of the tryptophans in the peptide sequence, suggesting that tryptophan acts as a strong determinant for positioning of proteins at the membrane/water interface. Finally, the influence of putative helix breakers was studied. It was shown that the presence of Pro in the transmembrane segment results in much higher exchange rates as compared with Gly or Leu, suggesting a destabilization of the alpha-helix. Tandem MS measurements suggested that the increased exchange takes place over the entire transmembrane segment. The results show that ESI-MS is a convenient technique to gain detailed insight into properties of peptides in lipid bilayers by monitoring H/D exchange kinetics.  相似文献   

15.
In this study, we have investigated the effect of hydrophobic mismatch between the thickness of the membrane and a transmembrane segment of a protein that directly inserts into the membrane bilayer. For this purpose we used mutants of the single-spanning Pf3 coat protein that can spontaneously insert into Escherichia coli membrane vesicles and large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs). The thickness of the liposomal bilayer could be altered by using lipids with different acyl chain lengths or by incorporation of cholesterol. The insertion efficiency of the protein clearly depended on the bilayer thickness, with most efficient insertion under hydrophobic matching conditions. To discriminate between effects of length and hydrophobicity, mutants with different synthetic transmembrane segments were constructed. These mutants inserted into LUVs in a mismatch-dependent manner. However, in particular for longer and less hydrophobic mutants, most efficient insertion was generally observed in thinner bilayers than expected on the basis of hydrophobic matching.  相似文献   

16.
A Percot  X X Zhu  M Lafleur 《Biopolymers》1999,50(6):647-655
In an effort to develop a polymer/peptide assembly for the immobilization of lipid vesicles, we have made and characterized four water-soluble amphiphilic peptides designed to associate spontaneously and strongly with lipid vesicles without causing significant leakage from anchored vesicles. These peptides have a primary amphiphilic structure with the following sequences: AAAAAAAAAAAAWKKKKKK, AALLLAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAWKKKKKK, and KKAALLLAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAWKKKKKK and its reversed homologue KKKKKKWAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAALLLAAKK. Two of the four peptides have their hydrophobic segments capped at both termini with basic residues to stabilize the transmembrane orientation and to increase the affinity for negatively charged vesicles. We have studied the secondary structure and the membrane affinity of the peptides as well as the effect of the different peptides on the membrane permeability. The influence of the hydrophobic length and the role of lysine residues were clearly established. First, a hydrophobic segment of 24 amino acids, corresponding approximately to the thickness of a lipid bilayer, improves considerably the affinity to zwitterionic lipids compared to the shorter one of 12 amino acids. The shorter peptide has a low membrane affinity since it may not be long enough to adopt a stable conformation. Second, the presence of lysine residues is essential since the binding is dominated by electrostatic interactions, as illustrated by the enhanced binding with anionic lipids. The charges at both ends, however, prevent the peptide from inserting spontaneously in the bilayer since it would involve the translocation of a charged end through the apolar core of the bilayer. The direction of the amino acid sequence of the peptide has no significant influence on its behavior. None of these peptides perturbs membrane permeability even at an incubation lipid to peptide molar ratio of 0.5. Among the four peptides, AALLLAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAWKKKKKK is identified as the most suitable anchor for the immobilization of lipid vesicles.  相似文献   

17.
High-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy were used to study the interaction of a cationic alpha-helical transmembrane peptide, acetyl-Lys2-Leu24-Lys2-amide (L24), and members of the homologous series of zwitterionic n-saturated diacyl phosphatidylethanolamines (PEs). Analogs of L24, in which the lysine residues were replaced by 2,3-diaminopropionic acid (acetyl-DAP2-Leu24-DAP2-amide (L24DAP)) or in which a leucine residue at each end of the polyleucine sequence was replaced by a tryptophan (Ac-K2-W-L22-W-K2-amide (WL22W)), were also studied to investigate the roles of lysine side-chain snorkeling and aromatic side-chain interactions with the interfacial region of phospholipid bilayers. The gel/liquid-crystalline phase transition temperature of the PE bilayers is altered by these peptides in a hydrophobic mismatch-independent manner, in contrast to the hydrophobic mismatch-dependent manner observed previously with zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine (PC) and anionic phosphatidylglycerol (PG) bilayers. Moreover, all three peptides reduce the phase transition temperature to a greater extent in PE bilayers than in PC and PG bilayers, indicating a greater disruption of PE gel-phase bilayer organization. Moreover, the lysine-anchored L24 reduces the phase transition temperature, enthalpy, and the cooperativity of PE bilayers to a much greater extent than DAP-anchored L24DAP, whereas replacement of the terminal leucines by tryptophan residues (Ac-K2-W-L22-W-K2-amide) only slightly attenuates the effects of this peptide on the chain-melting phase transition of the host PE bilayers. All three peptides form very stable alpha-helices in PE bilayers, but small conformational changes occur in response to mismatch between peptide hydrophobic length and gel-state lipid bilayer hydrophobic thickness. These results suggest that the lysine snorkeling plays a significant role in the peptide-PE interactions and that cation-pi-interactions between lysine and tryptophan residues may modulate these interactions. Altogether, these results suggest that the lipid-peptide interactions are affected not only by the hydrophobic mismatch between these peptides and the host lipid bilayer but also by the electrostatic and hydrogen-bonding interactions between the positively charged lysine residues at the termini of these peptides and the polar headgroups of PE bilayers.  相似文献   

18.
Protein-lipid interaction and bilayer regulation of membrane protein functions are largely controlled by the hydrophobic match between the transmembrane (TM) domain of membrane proteins and the surrounding lipid bilayer. To systematically characterize responses of a TM helix and lipid adaptations to a hydrophobic mismatch, we have performed a total of 5.8-μs umbrella sampling simulations and calculated the potentials of mean force (PMFs) as a function of TM helix tilt angle under various mismatch conditions. Single-pass TM peptides called WALPn (n = 16, 19, 23, and 27) were used in two lipid bilayers with different hydrophobic thicknesses to consider hydrophobic mismatch caused by either the TM length or the bilayer thickness. In addition, different flanking residues, such as alanine, lysine, and arginine, instead of tryptophan in WALP23 were used to examine their influence. The PMFs, their decomposition, and trajectory analysis demonstrate that 1), tilting of a single-pass TM helix is the major response to a hydrophobic mismatch; 2), TM helix tilting up to ∼10° is inherent due to the intrinsic entropic contribution arising from helix precession around the membrane normal even under a negative mismatch; 3), the favorable helix-lipid interaction provides additional driving forces for TM helix tilting under a positive mismatch; 4), the minimum-PMF tilt angle is generally located where there is the hydrophobic match and little lipid perturbation; 5), TM helix rotation is dependent on the specific helix-lipid interaction; and 6), anchoring residues at the hydrophilic/hydrophobic interface can be an important determinant of TM helix orientation.  相似文献   

19.
Cell-signaling peptides have been extensively used to transport functional molecules across the plasma membrane into living cells. These peptides consist of a hydrophobic sequence and a cationic nuclear localization sequence (NLS). It has been assumed that the hydrophobic region penetrates the hydrophobic lipid bilayer and delivers the NLS inside the cell. To better understand the transport mechanism of these peptides, in this study, we investigated the structure, orientation, tilt of the peptide relative to the bilayer normal, and the membrane interaction of two cell-signaling peptides, SA and SKP. Results from CD and solid-state NMR experiments combined with molecular dynamics simulations suggest that the hydrophobic region is helical and has a transmembrane orientation with the helical axis tilted away from the bilayer normal. The influence of the hydrophobic mismatch, between the hydrophobic length of the peptide and the hydrophobic thickness of the bilayer, on the tilt angle of the peptides was investigated using thicker POPC and thinner DMPC bilayers. NMR experiments showed that the hydrophobic domain of each peptide has a tilt angle of 15 +/- 3 degrees in POPC, whereas in DMPC, 25 +/- 3 degree and 30 +/- 3 degree tilts were observed for SA and SKP peptides, respectively. These results are in good agreement with molecular dynamics simulations, which predict a tilt angle of 13.3 degrees (SA in POPC), 16.4 degrees (SKP in POPC), 22.3 degrees (SA in DMPC), and 31.7 degrees (SKP in DMPC). These results and simulations on the hydrophobic fragment of SA or SKP suggest that the tilt of helices increases with a decrease in bilayer thickness without changing the phase, order, and structure of the lipid bilayers.  相似文献   

20.
Ren J  Lew S  Wang J  London E 《Biochemistry》1999,38(18):5905-5912
We examined the effect of the length of the hydrophobic core of Lys-flanked poly(Leu) peptides on their behavior when inserted into model membranes. Peptide structure and membrane location were assessed by the fluorescence emission lambdamax of a Trp residue in the center of the peptide sequence, the quenching of Trp fluorescence by nitroxide-labeled lipids (parallax analysis), and circular dichroism. Peptides in which the hydrophobic core varied in length from 11 to 23 residues were found to be largely alpha-helical when inserted into the bilayer. In dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (diC18:1PC) bilayers, a peptide with a 19-residue hydrophobic core exhibited highly blue-shifted fluorescence, an indication of Trp location in a nonpolar environment, and quenching localized the Trp to the bilayer center, an indication of transmembrane structure. A peptide with an 11-residue hydrophobic core exhibited emission that was red-shifted, suggesting a more polar Trp environment, and quenching showed the Trp was significantly displaced from the bilayer center, indicating that this peptide formed a nontransmembranous structure. A peptide with a 23-residue hydrophobic core gave somewhat red-shifted fluorescence, but quenching demonstrated the Trp was still close to the bilayer center, consistent with a transmembrane structure. Analogous behavior was observed when the behavior of individual peptides was examined in model membranes with various bilayer widths. Other experiments demonstrated that in diC18:1PC bilayers the dilution of the membrane concentration of the peptide with a 23-residue hydrophobic core resulted in a blue shift of fluorescence, suggesting the red-shifted fluorescence at higher peptide concentrations was due to helix oligomerization. The intermolecular self-quenching of rhodamine observed when the peptide was rhodamine-labeled, and the concentration dependence of self-quenching, supported this conclusion. These studies indicate that the mismatch between helix length and bilayer width can control membrane location, orientation, and helix-helix interactions, and thus may mismatch control both membrane protein folding and the interactions between membrane proteins.  相似文献   

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