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1.
Studies on membrane protein folding have focused on monomeric α-helical proteins and a major challenge is to extend this work to larger oligomeric membrane proteins. Here, we study the Escherichia coli (E. coli) ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter that imports vitamin B(12) (the BtuCD protein) and use it as a model system for investigating the folding and assembly of a tetrameric membrane protein complex. Our work takes advantage of the modular organization of BtuCD, which consists of two transmembrane protein subunits, BtuC, and two cytoplasmically located nucleotide-binding protein subunits, BtuD. We show that the BtuCD transporter can be re-assembled from both prefolded and partly unfolded, urea denatured BtuC and BtuD subunits. The in vitro re-assembly leads to a BtuCD complex with the correct, native, BtuC and BtuD subunit stoichiometry. The highest rates of ATP hydrolysis were achieved for BtuCD re-assembled from partly unfolded subunits. This supports the idea of cooperative folding and assembly of the constituent protein subunits of the BtuCD transporter. BtuCD folding also provides an opportunity to investigate how a protein that contains both membrane-bound and aqueous subunits coordinates the folding requirements of the hydrophobic and hydrophilic subunits.  相似文献   

2.
BtuCD is an ABC transporter catalyzing the uptake of vitamin B12 across the Escherichia coli inner membrane. A previously reported X-ray structure of BtuCD in complex with the periplasmic vitamin B12-binding protein BtuF revealed asymmetry of the transmembrane BtuC subunits. The functional relevance of this asymmetry has remained uncertain. Here we report the X-ray structure of a catalytically impaired BtuCD mutant in complex with BtuF, where the BtuC subunits adopt a distinct asymmetric conformation. The structure suggests that BtuF does not discriminate between, or impose, asymmetric conformations of BtuCD. It also explains the conformational disorder observed in BtuCDF crystals.Structured summary of protein interactionsBtuF, BtuD and BtuC physically interact by X-ray crystallography (View interaction)  相似文献   

3.
While there is evidence that other ABC transporters can tell between empty and loaded substrate binding protein, reconstitution experiments suggest otherwise for the Escherichia coli vitamin B12 importer BtuCD‐F. Here, we address the question of BtuCD‐F substrate sensitivity in a combined protein–protein docking and molecular dynamics simulation approach. Starting from the BtuCD and holo‐BtuF crystal structures, we model two holo‐BtuCD‐F docking complexes differing by a 180° orientation of BtuF. One of these is similar to the apo‐BtuCD‐F crystal structure. Both docking complexes were embedded in a lipid/water environment to investigate their dynamics and BtuCD's conformational response to the presence and absence of BtuF, vitamin B12, and Mg‐ATP in a series of 28 independent MD simulations. We find holo‐BtuF stabilizing the open conformation of BtuCD, whereas the transporter begins to close again when BtuF or vitamin B12 is removed—suggesting BtuCD‐F is capable of substrate sensitivity. We identified BtuC transmembrane helices 3 and 5, the L‐loops and the adjacent helices comprised of BtuC residues 170–180 as hotspots of conformational change. We propose the latter to act as substrate sensors. BtuF‐Trp44 appears to act as a lid on the vitamin B12 binding cleft in BtuF X‐ray structures and protrudes into the BtuCD transport channel in one of our simulations, which might represent an initial step in vitamin B12 uptake. On an average, we observe subunit motions where the nucleotide binding domains approach each other while the transmembrane domains display an opening trend toward the periplasm. Proteins 2010. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
Prokaryotic importers from the large family of ABC (ATP-binding cassette) transporters comprise four separate subunits: two membrane-embedded and two cytoplasmic ATP-binding subunits. This modular construction makes them ideal candidates for studies of the intersubunit interactions of membrane protein complexes that contain both hydrophobic and hydrophilic subunits. In the present paper, we focus on the vitamin B12 importer of Escherichia coli, BtuCD, that contains two transmembrane BtuC subunits and two ATP-binding BtuD subunits. We have studied the factors that induce subunit dissociation and unfolding in vitro. The BtuCD complex remains intact in alcohol and mild detergents, but urea or SDS separate the BtuC and BtuD subunits, with 6?M urea causing 80% of BtuD to be removed from BtuCD. ATP is found to stabilize the complex as a result of its binding to the BtuD subunits. In the absence of ATP, low concentrations of urea (0.5-3?M) also induce some unfolding, with approximately 14% reduction in helicity in 3?M urea, whereas, in the presence of ATP, no changes are observed. Disassembly at the BtuD-BtuD dimeric interface in BtuCD can be achieved with smaller concentrations of urea (0.5-3?M) than that required to cause disassembly at the BtuC-BtuD transmission interface (3-8?M), suggesting a stronger interaction of the latter. The results also suggest that unfolding and disassociation of subunits appear to be coupled processes. Our work provides insights into the subunit interactions of an ABC transporter and lays the foundation for studies of the reassembly of BtuCD.  相似文献   

5.
Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of two hydrated palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC) bilayers each containing eight carane derivative (KP-23) local anesthetic (LA) molecules in neutral (POPC-LA) or protonated (POPC-LAH) forms were carried out to investigate the effect of KP-23 and its protonation on the bilayer. 3-ns trajectories were used for analyses. A pure POPC bilayer was employed as a reference system. In both POPC-LA and POPC-LAH systems a few KP-23 molecules intercalated into the bilayer and moved near the bilayer/water interface. They were located on the hydrophobic core side of the interface in the POPC-LA bilayer, but on the water phase side in the POPC-LAH bilayer. The order of the POPC chains was higher in the POPC-LA bilayer than in the pure POPC bilayer and was lower in the POPC-LAH bilayer. Interactions between polar groups of KP-23 and POPC or water were responsible for a lower hydration of POPC headgroups in POPC bilayers containing KP-23 than in the pure POPC bilayer. KP-23 molecules were found to form aggregates both in POPC-LA and POPC-LAH bilayers. Due to higher amphiphilicity of LAH, the LAH aggregate was more micelle-like and larger than the LA one. The results demonstrate the rapid timescales of the initial processes that take place at and near the bilayer interface as well as details of the atomic level interactions between local anesthetic and the lipid matrix of a cell membrane.  相似文献   

6.
Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of a mono-cis-unsaturated 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) bilayer and a POPC bilayer containing 50mol% cholesterol (POPC-Chol50) were carried out for 200ns to compare the spatial organizations of the pure POPC bilayer and the POPC bilayer saturated with Chol. The results presented here indicate that saturation with Chol significantly narrows the distribution of vertical positions of the center-of-mass of POPC molecules and POPC atoms in the bilayer. In the POPC-Chol50 bilayer, the same moieties of the lipid molecules are better aligned at a given bilayer depth, forming the following clearly separated membrane regions: the polar headgroup, the rigid core consisting of steroid rings and upper fragments of the acyl chains, and the fluid hydrocarbon core consisting of Chol chains and the lower fragments of POPC chains. The membrane surface of the POPC-Chol50 bilayer is smooth. The results have biological significance because the POPC-Chol50 bilayer models the bulk phospholipid portion of the fiber-cell membrane in the eye lens. It is hypothesized that in the eye lens cholesterol-induced smoothing of the membrane surface decreases light-scattering and helps to maintain lens transparency.  相似文献   

7.
M R Wenk  T Alt  A Seelig    J Seelig 《Biophysical journal》1997,72(4):1719-1731
The interaction of the nonionic detergent octyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside (OG) with lipid bilayers was studied with high-sensitivity isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and solid-state 2H-NMR spectroscopy. The transfer of OG from the aqueous phase to lipid bilayers composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) can be investigated by employing detergent at concentrations below the critical micellar concentration; it can be defined by a surface partition equilibrium with a partition coefficient of K = 120 +/- 10 M-1, a molar binding enthalpy of delta H degrees D = 1.3 +/- 0.15 kcal/mol, and a free energy of binding of delta G degrees D = -5.2 kcal/mol. The heat of transfer is temperature dependent, with a molar heat capacity of delta CP = -75 cal K-1 mol-1. The large heat capacity and the near-zero delta H are typical for a hydrophobic binding equilibrium. The partition constant K decreased to approximately 100 M-1 for POPC membranes mixed with either negatively charged lipids or cholesterol, but was independent of membrane curvature. In contrast, a much larger variation was observed in the partition enthalpy. delta H degrees D increased by about 50% for large vesicles and by 75% for membranes containing 50 mol% cholesterol. Structural changes in the lipid bilayer were investigated with solid-state 2H-NMR. POPC was selectively deuterated at the headgroup segments and at different positions of the fatty acyl chains, and the measurement of the quadrupolar splittings provided information on the conformation and the order of the bilayer membrane. Addition of OG had almost no influence on the lipid headgroup region, even at concentrations close to bilayer disruption. In contrast, the fluctuations of fatty acyl chain segments located in the inner part of the bilayer increased strongly with increasing OG concentration. The 2H-NMR results demonstrate that the headgroup region is the most stable structural element of the lipid membrane, remaining intact until the disordering of the chains reaches a critical limit. The perturbing effect of OG is thus different from that of another nonionic detergent, octaethyleneglycol mono-n-dodecylether (C12E8), which produces a general disordering at all levels of the lipid bilayer. The OG-POPC interaction was also investigated with POPC monolayers, using a Langmuir trough. In the absence of lipid, the measurement of the Gibbs adsorption isotherm for pure OG solutions yielded an OG surface area of AS = 51 +/- 3 A2. On the other hand, the insertion area AI of OG in a POPC monolayer was determined by a monolayer expansion technique as AI = 58 +/- 10 A2. The similar area requirements with AS approximately AI indicate an almost complete insertion of OG into the lipid monolayer. The OG partition constant for a POPC monolayer at 32 mN/m was Kp approximately 320 M-1 and thus was larger than that for a POPC bilayer.  相似文献   

8.
Putative metal-chelate-type ABC transporter HI1470/1 is homologous with vitamin B12 importer BtuCD but exhibits a distinct inward-facing conformation in contrast to the outward-facing conformation of BtuCD. Normal-mode analysis of HI1470/1 reveals the intrinsic asymmetric conformational flexibility in this transporter and demonstrates that the transition from the inward-facing to the outward-facing conformation is realized through the asymmetric motion of individual subunits of the transporter. This analysis suggests that the asymmetric arrangement of the BtuC dimer in the crystal structure of the BtuCD-F complex represents an intermediate state relating HI1470/1 and BtuCD. Furthermore, a twisting motion between transmembrane domains and nucleotide-binding domains encoded in the lowest-frequency normal mode of this type of importer is found to contribute to the conformational transitions during the whole cycle of substrate transportation. A more complete translocation mechanism of the BtuCD type importer is proposed.  相似文献   

9.
Lu JX  Damodaran K  Blazyk J  Lorigan GA 《Biochemistry》2005,44(30):10208-10217
An 18-residue peptide, KWGAKIKIGAKIKIGAKI-NH(2) was designed to form amphiphilic beta-sheet structures when bound to lipid bilayers. The peptide possesses high antimicrobial activity when compared to naturally occurring linear antimicrobial peptides, most of which adopt an amphipathic alpha-helical conformation upon binding to the lipids. The perturbation of the bilayer by the peptide was studied by static (31)P and (2)H solid-state NMR spectroscopy using POPC and POPG/POPC (3/1) bilayer membranes with sn-1 chain perdeuterated POPC and POPG as the isotopic labels. (31)P NMR powder spectra exhibited two components for POPG/POPC bilayers upon addition of the peptide but only a slight change in the line shape for POPC bilayers, indicating that the peptide selectively disrupted the membrane structure consisting of POPG lipids. (2)H NMR powder spectra indicated a reduction in the lipid chain order for POPC bilayers and no significant change in the ordering for POPG/POPC bilayers upon association of the peptide with the bilayers, suggesting that the peptide acts as a surface peptide in POPG/POPC bilayers. Relaxation rates are more sensitive to the motions of the membranes over a large range of time scales. Longer (31)P longitudinal relaxation times for both POPG and POPC in the presence of the peptide indicated a direct interaction between the peptide and the POPG/POPC bilayer membranes. (31)P longitudinal relaxation studies also suggested that the peptide prefers to interact with the POPG phospholipids. However, inversion-recovery (2)H NMR spectroscopic experiments demonstrated a change in the relaxation rate of the lipid acyl chains for both the POPC membranes and the POPG/POPC membranes upon interaction with the peptide. Transverse relaxation studies indicated an increase in the spectral density of the collective membrane motion caused by the interaction between the peptide and the POPG/POPC membrane. The experimental results demonstrate significant dynamic changes in the membrane in the presence of the antimicrobial peptide and support a carpet mechanism for the disruption of the membranes by the antimicrobial peptide.  相似文献   

10.
A distinguishing feature of Archaeal plasma membranes is that their phospholipids contain ether-links, as opposed to bacterial and eukaryotic plasma membranes where phospholipids primarily contain ester-links. Experiments show that this chemical difference in headgroup-tail linkage does produce distinct differences in model bilayer properties. Here we examine the effects of salt on bilayer structure in the case of an ether-linked lipid bilayer. We use molecular dynamics simulations and compare equilibrium properties of two model lipid bilayers in NaCl salt solution – POPC and its ether-linked analog that we refer to as HOPC. We make the following key observations. The headgroup region of HOPC “adsorbs” fewer ions compared to the headgroup region of POPC. Consistent with this, we note that the Debye screening length in the HOPC system is ∼ 10% shorter than that in the POPC system. Herein, we introduce a protocol to identify the lipid-water interfacial boundary that reproduces the bulk salt distribution consistent with Gouy-Chapman theory. We also note that the HOPC bilayer has excess solvent in the headgroup region when compared to POPC, coinciding with a trough in the electrostatic potential. Waters in this region have longer autocorrelation times and smaller lateral diffusion rates compared to the corresponding region in the POPC bilayer, suggesting that the waters in HOPC are more strongly coordinated to the lipid headgroups. Furthermore, we note that it is this region of tightly coordinated waters in the HOPC system that has a lower density of Na+ ions. Based on these observations we conclude that an ether-linked lipid bilayer has a lower binding affinity for Na+ compared to an ester-linked lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

11.
Deuterium (2H) NMR was used to study bilayer hydrophobic thickness and mechanical properties when cholesterol and/or synthetic amphiphillic polypeptides were added to deuterated POPC lipid bilayer membranes in the liquid-crystalline (fluid) phase. Smoothed acyl chain orientational order profiles were used to calculate bilayer hydrophobic thickness. Addition of 30 mol% cholesterol to POPC at 25 degrees C increased the bilayer thickness from 2.58 to 2.99 nm. The peptides were chosen to span the bilayers with more or less mismatch between the hydrophobic peptide length and membrane hydrophobic thickness. The average thickness of the pure lipid bilayers was significantly perturbed upon addition of peptide only in cases of large mismatch, being increased (decreased) when the peptide hydrophobic length was greater (less) than that of the pure bilayer, consistent with the "mattress" model of protein lipid interactions (Mouritsen, O.G., and M. Bloom. 1984. Biophys. J. 46:141-153). The experimental results were also used to examine the combined influence of the polypeptides and cholesterol on the orientational order profile and thickness expansivity of the membranes. A detailed model for the spatial distribution of POPC and cholesterol molecules in the bilayers was proposed to reconcile the general features of these measurements with micromechanical measurements of area expansivity in closely related systems. Experiments to test the model were proposed.  相似文献   

12.
Plasmon-waveguide resonance (PWR) spectroscopy has been used to examine solid-supported lipid bilayers consisting of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC), palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC), sphingomyelin (SM), and phosphatidylcholine/SM binary mixtures. Spectral simulation of the resonance curves demonstrated an increase in bilayer thickness, long-range order, and molecular packing density in going from DOPC to POPC to SM single component bilayers, as expected based on the decreasing level of unsaturation in the fatty acyl chains. DOPC/SM and POPC/SM binary mixtures yielded PWR spectra that can be ascribed to a superposition of two resonances corresponding to microdomains (rafts) consisting of phosphatidylcholine- and SM-rich phases coexisting within a single bilayer. These were formed spontaneously over time as a consequence of lateral phase separation. Each microdomain contained a small proportion (<20%) of the other lipid component, which increased their kinetic and thermodynamic stability. Incorporation of a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-linked protein (placental alkaline phosphatase) occurred within each of the single component bilayers, although the insertion was less efficient into the DOPC bilayer. Incorporation of placental alkaline phosphatase into a DOPC/SM binary bilayer occurred with preferential insertion into the SM-rich phase, although the protein incorporated into both phases at higher concentrations. These results demonstrate the utility of PWR spectroscopy to provide insights into raft formation and protein sorting in model lipid membranes.  相似文献   

13.
Ivetac A  Campbell JD  Sansom MS 《Biochemistry》2007,46(10):2767-2778
ABC transporters are integral membrane proteins which couple the energy of ATP hydrolysis to the translocation of solutes across cell membranes. BtuCD is a approximately 1100-residue protein found in the inner membrane of Gram-negative bacteria which transports vitamin B12. Vitamin B12 is bound in the periplasm by BtuF, which delivers the solute to the periplasmic entrance of the transporter protein complex BtuCD. Molecular dynamics simulations of the BtuCD and BtuCDF complexes (in a lipid bilayer) and of the isolated BtuD and BtuF proteins (in water) have been used to explore the conformational dynamics of this complex transport system. Overall, seven simulations have been performed, with and without bound ATP, corresponding to a total simulation time of 0.1 micros. Binding of ATP drives closure of the nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs) in BtuD in a symmetrical fashion, but not in BtuCD. It seems that ATP constrains the flexibility of the NBDs in BtuCD such that their closure may only occur upon binding of BtuF to the complex. Upon introduction of BtuF, and concomitant with NBD association, one ATP-binding site displays a closure, while the opposite site remains relatively unchanged. This asymmetry may reflect an initial step in the "alternating hydrolysis" mechanism and is consistent with measurements of nucleotide-binding stoichiometries. Principal components analysis of the simulation of BtuCD reveals motions that are comparable to those suggested in current transport models.  相似文献   

14.
Bemporad D  Sands ZA  Wee CL  Grottesi A  Sansom MS 《Biochemistry》2006,45(39):11844-11855
VSTx1 is a tarantula venom toxin which binds to the archaebacterial voltage-gated potassium channel KvAP. VSTx1 is thought to access the voltage sensor domain of the channel via the lipid bilayer phase. In order to understand its mode of action and implications for the mechanism of channel activation, it is important to characterize the interactions of VSTx1 with lipid bilayers. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations (for a total simulation time in excess of 0.2 micros) have been used to explore VSTx1 localization and interactions with zwitterionic (POPC) and with anionic (POPE/POPG) lipid bilayers. In particular, three series of MD simulations have been used to explore the net drift of VSTx1 relative to the center of a bilayer, starting from different locations of the toxin. The preferred location of the toxin is at the membrane/water interface. Although there are differences between POPC and POPE/POPG bilayers, in both cases the toxin forms favorable interactions at the interface, maximizing H-bonding to lipid headgroups and to water molecules while retaining interactions with the hydrophobic core of the bilayer. A 30 ns unrestrained simulation reveals dynamic partitioning of VSTx1 into the interface of a POPC bilayer. The preferential location of VSTx1 at the interface is discussed in the context of Kv channel gating models and provides support for a mode of action in which the toxin interacts with the Kv voltage sensor "paddle" formed by the S3 and S4 helices.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of cholesterol (Chol) on phospholipid bilayers include ordering of the fatty acyl chains, condensing of the lipids in the bilayer plane, and promotion of the liquid-ordered phase. These effects depend on the type of phospholipids in the bilayer and are determined by the nature of the underlying molecular interactions. As for Chol, it has been shown to interact more favorably with sphingomyelin than with most phosphatidylcholines, which in given circumstances leads to formation of lateral domains. However, the exact origin and nature of Chol-phospholipid interactions have recently been subjects of speculation. We examine interactions between Chol, palmitoylsphingomyelin (PSM) and palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) in hydrated lipid bilayers by extensive atom-scale molecular dynamics simulations. We employ a tailored lipid configuration: Individual PSM and Chol monomers, as well as PSM-Chol dimers, are embedded in a POPC lipid bilayer in the liquid crystalline phase. Such a setup allows direct comparison of dimeric and monomeric PSMs and Chol, which ultimately shows how the small differences in PSM and POPC structure can lead to profoundly different interactions with Chol. Our analysis shows that direct hydrogen bonding between PSM and Chol does not provide an adequate explanation for their putative specific interaction. Rather, a combination of charge-pairing, hydrophobic, and van der Waals interactions leads to a lower tilt in PSM neighboring Chol than in Chol with only POPC neighbors. This implies improved Chol-induced ordering of PSM's chains over POPC's chains. These findings are discussed in the context of the hydrophobic mismatch concept suggested recently.  相似文献   

16.
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) act as host defenses against microbial pathogens. Here we investigate the interactions of SVS-1 (KVKVKVKVdPlPTKVKVKVK), an engineered AMP and anti-cancer β-hairpin peptide, with lipid bilayers using spectroscopic studies and atomistic molecular dynamics simulations. In agreement with literature reports, simulation and experiment show preferential binding of SVS-1 peptides to anionic over neutral bilayers. Fluorescence and circular dichroism studies of a Trp-substituted SVS-1 analogue indicate, however, that it will bind to a zwitterionic DPPC bilayer under high-curvature conditions and folds into a hairpin. In bilayers formed from a 1:1 mixture of DPPC and anionic DPPG lipids, curvature and lipid fluidity are also observed to promote deeper insertion of the fluorescent peptide. Simulations using the CHARMM C36m force field offer complementary insight into timescales and mechanisms of folding and insertion. SVS-1 simulated at an anionic mixed POPC/POPG bilayer folded into a hairpin over a microsecond, the final stage in folding coinciding with the establishment of contact between the peptide's valine sidechains and the lipid tails through a “flip and dip” mechanism. Partial, transient folding and superficial bilayer contact are seen in simulation of the peptide at a zwitterionic POPC bilayer. Only when external surface tension is applied does the peptide establish lasting contact with the POPC bilayer. Our findings reveal the influence of disruption to lipid headgroup packing (via curvature or surface tension) on the pathway of binding and insertion, highlighting the collaborative effort of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions on interaction of SVS-1 with lipid bilayers.  相似文献   

17.
Sample orientation relative to the static magnetic field of an NMR spectrometer allows study of membrane proteins in the lipid bilayer setting. The straightforward preparation and handling of extremely thin mica substrates with consistent surface properties has prompted us to examine oriented phospholipid bilayer and hexagonal phases on mica. The spectral characteristics of oriented lipid samples formed on mica are as good as or better than those on glass. Nine solvents with varying dielectric constants were used to cast lipid films or for vesicle spreading; film characteristics were then compared, and static solid-state 31P-NMR was used to characterize the degree of orientation of the hydrated lipid species. Lipids with four headgroup chemistries were tested: 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC), 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoglycerol (POPG), 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphate (DOPA), and 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DOPE). Solvent affected orientation of POPG, DOPA, and DOPE, but not POPC. Film characteristics varied with solvent, with ramifications for producing homogeneous oriented lipid samples. POPC was used to optimize the amount of lipid per substrate and compare hydration methods. POPG did not orient reproducibly, whereas POPG-POPC mixtures did. DOPA showed 1-2 oriented states depending upon hydration level and deposition method. DOPE formed an oriented hexagonal phase that underwent a reversible temperature-induced phase transition to the oriented bilayer phase.  相似文献   

18.
A novel class of cell-penetrating, nucleolar-targeting peptides (NrTPs), was recently developed from the rattlesnake venom toxin crotamine. Based on the intrinsic fluorescence of tyrosine or tryptophan residues, the partition of NrTPs and crotamine to membranes with variable lipid compositions was studied. Partition coefficient values (in the 10(2)-10(5) range) followed essentially the compositional trend POPC:POPG≤POPG相似文献   

19.
Yamaguchi S  Hong T  Waring A  Lehrer RI  Hong M 《Biochemistry》2002,41(31):9852-9862
Protegrin-1 (PG-1) is a broad-spectrum beta-sheet antimicrobial peptide found in porcine leukocytes. The mechanism of action and the orientation of PG-1 in lipid bilayers are here investigated using (2)H, (31)P, (13)C, and (15)N solid-state NMR spectroscopy. (2)H spectra of mechanically aligned and chain-perdeuterated 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) bilayers indicate that PG-1 at high concentrations destroys the orientational order of the aligned lamellar bilayer. The conformation of the lipid headgroups in the unoriented region is significantly altered, as seen from the (31)P spectra of POPC and the (2)H spectra of headgroup-deuterated 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine. These observations indicate that PG-1 disrupts microbial membranes by breaking the extended bilayer into smaller disks, where a significant fraction of lipids is located in the edges of the disks with a distribution of orientations. These edges allow the lipid bilayer to bend back on itself as in toroidal pores. Interestingly, this loss of bilayer orientation occurs only in long-chain lipids such as POPC and not in shorter chain lipids such as 1,2-dilauroyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (DLPC). To understand the mode of binding of PG-1 to the lipid bilayer, we determined the orientation of PG-1 in DLPC bilayers. The (13)CO and (15)N chemical shifts of Val-16 labeled PG-1 indicate that the beta-strand axis is tilted by 55 degrees +/- 5 degrees from the bilayer normal while the normal of the beta-sheet plane is 48 degrees +/- 5 degrees from the bilayer normal. This orientation favors interaction of the hydrophobic backbone of the peptide with the hydrophobic core of the bilayer and positions the cationic Arg side chains to interact with the anionic phosphate groups. This is the first time that the orientation of a disulfide-stabilized beta-sheet membrane peptide has been determined by solid-state NMR.  相似文献   

20.
Cationic amphiphiles used for transfection can be incorporated into biological membranes. By differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), cholesterol solubilization in phospholipid membranes, in the absence and presence of cationic amphiphiles, was determined. Two different systems were studied: 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC)+cholesterol (1:3, POPC:Chol, molar ratio) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-l-serine] (POPS)+cholesterol (3:2, POPS:Chol, molar ratio), which contain cholesterol in crystallite form. For the zwitterionic lipid POPC, cationic amphiphiles were tested, up to 7 mol%, while for anionic POPS bilayers, which possibly incorporate more positive amphiphiles, the fractions used were higher, up to 23 mol%. 1,2-dioleoyl-3-trimethylammonium-propane (DOTAP) and DOTAP in methyl sulfate salt form (DOTAPmss) were found to cause a small decrease on the enthalpy of the cholesterol transition of pure cholesterol aggregates, possibly indicating a slight increase on the cholesterol solubilization in POPC vesicles. With the anionic system POPS:Chol, the cationic amphiphiles dramatically change the cholesterol crystal thermal transition, indicating significant changes in the cholesterol aggregates. For structural studies, phospholipids spin labeled at the 5th or 16th carbon atoms were incorporated. In POPC, at the bilayer core, the cationic amphiphiles significantly increase the bilayer packing, decreasing the membrane polarity, with the cholesterol derivative 3 beta-[N-(N',N'-dimethylaminoethane)-carbamoyl]-cholesterol (DC-chol) displaying a stronger effect. In POPS and POPS:Chol, DC-chol was also found to considerably increase the bilayer packing. Hence, exogenous cationic amphiphiles used to deliver nucleic acids to cells can change the bilayer packing of biological membranes and alter the structure of cholesterol crystals, which are believed to be the precursors to atherosclerotic lesions.  相似文献   

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