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1.
Pressure effects on alamethicin conductance in bilayer membranes.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
We report here the first observations of the effects of elevated hydrostatic pressure on the kinetics of bilayer membrane conductance induced by the pore-forming antibiotic, alamethicin. Bacterial phosphatidylethanolamine-squalene bilayer membranes were formed by the apposition of lipid monolayers in a vessel capable of sustaining hydrostatic pressures in the range, 0.1-100 MPa (1-1,000 atm). Principal observations were (a) the lifetimes of discrete conductance states were lengthened with increasing pressure, (b) both the onset and decay of alamethicin conductance accompanying application and removal of supra-threshold voltage pulses were slowed with increasing pressure, (c) the onset of alamethicin conductance at elevated pressure became distinctly sigmoidal, suggesting an electrically silent intermediate state of channel assembly, (d) the magnitudes of the discrete conductance levels observed did not change with pressure, and, (e) the voltage threshold for the onset of alamethicin conductance was not altered by pressure. Apparent activation volumes for both the formation and decay of conducting states were positive and of comparable magnitude, namely, approximately 100 A3/event. Observation d indicates that channel geometry and the kinetics of ion transport through open channels were not affected by pressure in the range employed. The remaining observations indicate that, while the relative positions of free-energy minima characterizing individual conducting states at a given voltage were not modified by pressure, the heights of intervening potential maxima were increased by its application.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Alamethicin induces a conductance in black lipid films which increases exponentially with voltage. At low conductance the increase occurs in discrete steps which form a pattern of five levels, the second and third being most likely. The conductance of each level is directly proportional to salt concentration, inversely proportional to solution viscosity, and nearly independent of voltage.The probability distribution of the five steps is not a function of voltage, but as the voltage is increased, more levels begin to appear. These can be explained as super-positions of the original five, both in position and relative probability.This suggests that the five levels are associated with a physical entity which we call a pore. This point of view is confirmed by the following measurements. The kinetic response of the current to a voltage step is first order, and shows an exponential increase in rate of pore formation and an exponential decrease in rate of pore disappearance with voltage. If these rates are statistical, the number of pores should fluctuate about a voltage-dependent mean. High conductance current fluctuations are too large to be explained by fluctuation in the number of pores alone. But if fluctuations among the five levels are included, the magnitude of the fluctuations at high conductance is accurately predicted.Alamethicin adsorbs reversibly to the membrane surface, and the conductance at a fixed voltage depends on the ninth power of alamethicin concentration and on the fourth power of salt concentration, in the aqueous phase. In our bacterial phosphatidyl ethanolamine membranes, alamethicin added to one side of the membrane produces elevated conductance only when the voltage on that side is increased.On leave of absence from the Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Chile, Santiago de Chile.  相似文献   

3.
Alamethicin at a concentration of 2 micrograms/ml on one side of a lipid bilayer, formed at the tip of a patch clamp pipette from diphytanoyl phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol (2:1 mol ratio) in aqueous 0.5 M KCl, 5 mM Hepes, pH 7.0, exhibits an asymmetric current-voltage curve, only yielding alamethicin currents when the side to which the peptide has been added is made positive. Below room temperature, however, single alamethicin channels created in such membranes sometimes survive a sudden reversal of the polarity. These "reversed" channels are distinct from transiently observed states displayed as the channel closes after a polarity reversal. Such "reversed" channels can be monitored for periods up to several minutes, during which time we have observed them to fluctuate through more than 20 discrete conductance states. They are convenient for the study of isolated ion-conducting alamethicin aggregates because, after voltage reversal, no subsequent incorporation of additional ion-conducting aggregates takes place.  相似文献   

4.
Voltage-dependent lipid flip-flop induced by alamethicin.   总被引:5,自引:1,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Alamethicin appears to allow voltage-dependent lipid exchange ("flip-flop") between leaflets of a planar bilayer. In membranes with one leaflet of phosphatidyl serine and one of phosphatidyl ethanolamine, the shape of the nonactin current-voltage curve accurately reports the difference in surface potential between the two sides of the membrane. The surface potential is itself a good measure of membrane asymmetry. Alamethicin added to the bathing solutions of an asymmetric membrane does not per se reduce the membrane asymmetry, but turning on the alamethicin conductance by application of a voltage pulse does. Immediately after application of a voltage pulse, large enough to turn on the alamethicin conductance, the asymmetry of the nonactin-K+ current voltage curve decreases, in some cases, nearly to zero. During the pulse, the alamethicin conductance activates if a decrease in surface potential favors turn-on of the alamethicin conductance or inactivates if a decrease in surface potential favors turn-off of the alamethicin conductance. After the pulse, the nonactin-K+ asymmetry returns to its original value if the alamethicin conductance is not turned on. The time-course of this return allows an estimate of the diffusion constant of lipid in the planar bilayer. The value obtained is 5.1 x 10(-8) cm2/s.  相似文献   

5.
H Duclohier  G Molle    G Spach 《Biophysical journal》1989,56(5):1017-1021
The ionophore properties of magainin I, an antimicrobial and amphipathic peptide from the skin of Xenopus, were investigated in planar lipid bilayers. Circular dichroism studies, performed comparatively with alamethicin, in small or large unilamellar phospholipidic vesicles, point to a smaller proportion of alpha-helical conformation in membranes. A weakly voltage-dependent macroscopic conductance which is anion-selective is developed when using large aqueous peptide concentration with lipid bilayer under high voltages. Single-channel experiments revealed two main conductance levels occurring independently in separate trials. Pre-aggregates lying on the membrane surface at rest and drawn into the bilayer upon voltage application are assumed to account for this behaviour contrasting with the classical multistates displayed by alamethicin.  相似文献   

6.
The membrane surface charge modifies the conductance of ion channels by changing the electric potential and redistributing the ionic composition in their vicinity. We have studied the effects of lipid charge on the conductance of a multi-state channel formed in planar lipid bilayers by the peptide antibiotic alamethicin. The channel conductance was measured in two lipids: in a neutral dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE) and a negatively charged dioleoylphosphatidylserine (DOPS). The charge state of DOPS was manipulated by the pH of the membrane-bathing solution. We find that at high salt concentrations (e.g., 2 M NaCl) the effect of the lipid charge is below the accuracy of our measurements. However, when the salt concentration in the membrane-bathing solution is decreased, the surface charge manifests itself as an increase in the conductance of the first two channel levels that correspond to the smallest conductive alamethicin aggregates. Our analysis shows that both the salt and pH dependence of the surface charge effect can be rationalized within the nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann approach. Given channel conductance in neutral lipids, we use different procedures to account for the surface charge (e.g., introduce averaging over the channel aperture and take into account Na+ adsorption to DOPS heads), but only one adjustable parameter: an effective distance from the nearest lipid charge to the channel mouth center. We show that this distance varies by 0.3-0.4 nm upon channel transition from the minimal conducting aggregate (level L0) to the next larger one (level L1). This conclusion is in accord with a simple geometrical model of alamethicin aggregation.  相似文献   

7.
Alamethicin is an antibiotic which produces voltage gated channels in lipid bilayer membranes. Recently completed studies of the pressure dependence of alamethicin conductance have shown that its onset following application of a suprathreshold voltage step at a pressure of 100 MPa (1000 atm) is markedly slowed relative to that observed at ambient pressure. Furthermore, the time course of the onset of conductance becomes distinctly sigmoidal at elevated pressure, a condition which is not evident at atmospheric pressure. The decay of alamethicin conductance upon removal of suprathreshold applied voltage is also slowed by application of hydrostatic pressure, but it follows a single exponential time course at all pressures. In addition, kinetic parameters characterizing the onset and decay of conductance show distinctly different pressure dependences. These observations cannot be explained by a two state model in which alamethicin moves reversibly between nonconducting and conducting states. Therefore we re-examine critically a hypothesis made by previous workers, namely that alamethicin, in monomeric or aggregate form, moves upon application of suprathreshold voltage first from a nonconducting surface state to a nonconducting preassembly or precursor state, and then finally into a conducting state. Parameters of this three state model are related to a geometric factor which measures the degree of sigmoidal conductance response and which can be evaluated directly from experimental data. An alternative aggregation-type analysis, equivalent to that applied by Hodgkin & Huxley to the potassium conductance in squid axon, is also considered in the context of this same geometric factor. The possibility of distinguishing between these analyses on the basis of experimental data is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
We have purified a major outer membrane protein from Aeromonas salmonicida. This 42-kilodalton protein shared several physical characteristics with enterobacterial porins in that it was noncovalently associated with the peptidoglycan, it was released from the peptidoglycan in the presence of 0.1 M NaCl and sodium dodecyl sulfate, and its mobility on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels was dependent on the solubilization temperature before electrophoresis. When added to the aqueous solution bathing a planar bilayer membrane it caused the conductance of the membrane to increase by several orders of magnitude. At lower protein concentrations, single channels with an average conductance of 1.6 nS in 1 M KCl were incorporated into the membrane in a stepwise fashion. Evidence that the protein formed a large, relatively nonselective, water-filled channel was obtained by performing single-channel experiments at different NaCl concentrations and in a variety of different salts. Current through the channel was a linear function of the applied voltage, and no evidence of voltage gating was observed. In addition, we obtained evidence for a 43-kilodalton channel-forming protein in the outer membrane of A. hydrophila with a similar single-channel conductance as the 42-kilodalton protein in 1 M NaCl.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of alamethicin and its derivatives on the voltage-dependent capacitance of phosphatidylethanolamine (squalane) membranes was measured using two different methods: lock-in detection and voltage pulse. Alamethicin and its derivatives modulate the voltage-dependent capacitance at voltages lower than the voltage at which alamethicin-induced conductance is detected. The magnitude and sign of this alamethicin-induced capacitance change depends on the aqueous alamethicin concentration and the kind of alamethicin used. Our experimental data can be interpreted as a potential-dependent pseudocapacitance associated with adsorbed alamethicin. Pseudocapacitance is expressed as a function of alamethicin charge, its concentration in the bathing solution and the applied electric field. The theory describes the dependence of the capacitance on applied voltage and alamethicin concentration. When alamethicin is neutral the theory predicts no change of the voltage-dependent capacitance with either sign of applied voltage. Experimental data are consistent with the model in which alamethicin molecules interact with each other while being adsorbed to the membrane surface. The energy of this interaction depends on the alamethicin concentration.  相似文献   

10.
Alamethicin, a linear 20-amino acid antibiotic, forms voltage-dependent channels in lipid bilayer membranes. We show here that alamethicin-phospholipid conjugates can be prepared by photolysis of unilamellar vesicles containing alamethicin and a phosphatidylcholine analogue with a carbene precursor at the end of the C-2 fatty acyl chain. This result indicates that at least a portion of the alamethicin molecule is in contact with the hydrocarbon moiety of the membrane in the absence of an applied voltage. Furthermore, the alamethicin-phospholipid photoproduct is able to induce a voltage-gated conductance similar to that of natural alamethicin. The importance of these results in terms of mechanisms for channel gating is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Current-voltage relations have been measured across lecithin bilayers doped with alamethicin molecules. The results show that there are two aspects of the induced conductances, a voltage-dependent and a voltage-independent conductance. Both have been characterized as a function of alamethicin and KCl concentration. The two aspects of the conductances do not show the same changes with those two variables. The voltage-independent conductance is affected very little by changes in KCl concentration, and its dependance on alamethicin concentration reveals that it is produced by two or three alamethicin molecules. The voltage-dependent conductance is shifted by the changes in KCl concentration only when the concentrations are greater than or equal to 100 mM; below 100 mM KCl the slope of the log conductance-voltage curve is also reduced. The effect of changing alamethicin concentration reveals that nine or ten molecules are involved for KCl concentrations larger than 100 mM; if the KCl concentration is less than 100 mM, the effect of changing the alamethicin concentration is reduced. Time-dependent measurements have also been performed; only one time constant was found and it is strongly voltage-dependent. Also a very slow voltage-dependent absorption process is found. These results can be explained if it is assumed that pores are formed of a mixture of charged and uncharged alamethicin molecules when a voltage is applied and that uncharged alamethicin can also form pores without applying a voltage, once the absorption process has been started by previously applied voltages. The voltage dependence of the time constant seems to indicate that the voltage-dependent pore formation is produced by aggregates of charged alamethicin rather than independent molecules.  相似文献   

12.
We studied effects of toxins produced by a bacterium Pseudomonas syringae pv. syringae on the conductance of bilayer lipid membranes (BLM). The used toxins were as follows: syringopeptin 22A (SP22A), syringomycin E (SPE), syringostatin A (SSA), syringotoxin B (STB), and methylated syringomycin E (CH3-SRE). All toxins demonstrated channel-forming activity. The threshold sequence for toxin activity was SP22A > SRE approximately equal to SSA > STB > CH3-SRE, and this sequence was independent of lipid membrane composition, and NaCl concentration (pH 6) in the membrane bathing solution (in the range of 0.1-1.0 M). This sequence correlated with relative bioactivities of toxins. In addition, SRE demonstrated a more potent antifungal activity than CH3-SRE. These findings suggest that ion channel formation may underlie the bioactivities of the above toxins. The properties of single ion channels formed by the toxins in BLMs were found to be similar, which points to the similarity in the channel structures. In negatively charged membranes, bathed with diluted electrolyte solutions (0.1 M NaCl), the channels were seen to open with positive transmembrane potentials (V) (from the side of toxin addition), and close with negative potentials. In uncharged membranes the opposite response to a voltage sign was observed. Increasing the NaCl concentration up to 1 M unified the voltage sensitivity of channels in charged and uncharged membranes: channels opened with negative V, and closed with positive V. With all systems, the voltage current curves of single channels were similarly superlinear in the applied voltage and asymmetric in its sign. It was found that the single channel conductance of STB and SSA was higher than that of other toxin channels. All the toxins formed at least two types of ion channels that were multiple by a factor of either 6 or 4 in their conductance. The results are discussed in terms of the structural features of toxin molecules.  相似文献   

13.
Trichotoxin A-40 induces voltage-dependent pores in bilayer lipid membranes comparable to those formed by alamethicin and suzukacillin. The conductance values of the trichotoxin A-40 pores are of similar magnitude and show the same characteristic pattern sequence of non-integral multiples of a unit-conductance step as alamethicin and suzukacillin.However, voltage-jump current-relaxation experiments show significant differences between trichotoxin A-40 and alamethicin and suzukacillin. With trichotoxin A-40 three different relaxation processes could be observed, whereas with alamethicin and suzukacillin only two processes had been distinguished. The fast process in each case is related to pore state transitions and the slower (medium) process to the decay rate of pores. The third very slow process, which is not found with alamethicin and suzukacillin, could not clearly be assigned to a molecular mechanism. Whereas in the case of alamethicin and suzukacillin the relaxation amplitude of the slow process is considerably larger than the relaxation amplitude of the fast process, the reverse is true for trichotoxin A-40, where the largest relaxation amplitude is that of the fast process.Contrary to alamethicin and suzukacillin, trichotoxin A-40 is soluble in the lipid/decane membrane-forming solution, when added from an ethanolic stock solution. Its bilayer-modifying properties are not changed, whether the antibiotic is added to the aqueous salt solution or to the membrane-forming solution.Several different analogues of alamethicin, suzukacillin and trichotoxin A-40 have been investigated and compared with respect to the induced current-voltage characteristics in lipid bilayers. A suzukacillin A-derivative where phenylalaninol had been split off is active as well as trichotoxin A-40 which lacks the phenylalaninol group by nature. Different C-terminal groups like -COOH, -CONH2, -COOCH3 and -CO-Ala-Ala-OCH3 cause qualitative changes but not the loss of the pore-formation property.  相似文献   

14.
L P Kelsh  J F Ellena  D S Cafiso 《Biochemistry》1992,31(22):5136-5144
Alamethicin is a channel-forming peptide antibiotic that produces a highly voltage-dependent conductance in planar bilayers. To provide insight into the mechanisms for its voltage dependence, the dynamics of the peptide were examined in solution using nuclear magnetic resonance. Natural-abundance 13C spin-lattice relaxation rates and 13C-1H nuclear Overhauser effects of alamethicin were measured at two magnetic field strengths in methanol. This information was interpreted using a model-free approach to obtain values for the overall correlation times as well as the rates and amplitudes of the internal motions of the peptide. The picosecond, internal motions of alamethicin are highly restricted along the peptide backbone and indicate that it behaves as a rigid helical rod in solution. The side chain carbons exhibit increased segmental motion as their distance from the peptide backbone is increased; however, these motions are not unrestricted. Methyl group dynamics are also consistent with the restricted motions observed for the backbone carbons. There is no evidence from these dynamics measurements for a hinged motion of the peptide about proline-14. Alamethicin appears to be slightly less structured in methanol than in the membrane; as a result, alamethicin is also expected to behave as a rigid helix in the membrane. This suggests that the gating of this peptide involves changes in the orientation of the entire helix, rather than the movement of a segment of the peptide backbone.  相似文献   

15.
Alamethicin is an antimicrobial peptide that forms stable channels with well-defined conductance levels. We have used extended molecular dynamics simulations of alamethicin bundles consisting of 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 helices in a palmitoyl-oleolyl-phosphatidylcholine bilayer to evaluate and analyze channel models and to link the models to the experimentally measured conductance levels. Our results suggest that four helices do not form a stable water-filled channel and might not even form a stable intermediate. The lowest measurable conductance level is likely to correspond to the pentamer. At higher aggregation numbers the bundles become less symmetrical. Water properties inside the different-sized bundles are similar. The hexamer is the most stable model with a stability comparable with simulations based on crystal structures. The simulation was extended from 4 to 20 ns or several times the mean passage time of an ion. Essential dynamics analyses were used to test the hypothesis that correlated motions of the helical bundles account for high-frequency noise observed in open channel measurements. In a 20-ns simulation of a hexameric alamethicin bundle, the main motions are those of individual helices, not of the bundle as a whole. A detailed comparison of simulations using different methods to treat long-range electrostatic interactions (a twin range cutoff, Particle Mesh Ewald, and a twin range cutoff combined with a reaction field correction) shows that water orientation inside the alamethicin channels is sensitive to the algorithms used. In all cases, water ordering due to the protein structure is strong, although the exact profile changes somewhat. Adding an extra 4-nm layer of water only changes the water ordering slightly in the case of particle mesh Ewald, suggesting that periodicity artifacts for this system are not serious.  相似文献   

16.
The bee venom constituent, melittin, is structurally and functionally related to alamethicin. By forming solvent-free planar bilayers of small area (approx. 100 microns 2) on the tip of fire-polished glass pipettes we could observe single melittin pores in these membranes. An increase in the applied voltage induced further non-integral conductance levels. This indicates that melittin forms multi-level pores similar to those formed by alamethicin. Trichotoxin A40, an antibiotic analogue of alamethicin, also induces a voltage-dependent bilayer conductivity, but no stable pore states are resolved. However, chemical modification of the C-terminal molecule part by introduction of a dansyl group leads to a steeper voltage-dependence and pore state stabilization. Comparing structure and activity of several natural and synthetic amphiphilic polypeptides, we conclude that a lipophilic, N-terminal alpha-helical part of adequate length (dipole moment) and a large enough hydrophilic, C-terminal region are sufficient prerequisites for voltage-dependent formation of multi-state pores.  相似文献   

17.
The voltage dependence of rat liver gap junctions was investigated using non-denaturing solubilization and reconstitution of gap-junction protein into proteoliposomes in controlled conditions of connexon aggregation. The presence of liver connexin 32 in reconstituted proteoliposomes was checked with specific antibodies. The proteoliposomes were inserted into planar lipid bilayers by fusion. The single-channel conductance was voltage independent, and its magnitude was 700-1900 pS in 1 M NaCl, as expected from other reports, assuming that conductance is linear with ion activity. The channels were open at zero voltage and completely closed above 40 mV in either direction. This steep voltage dependence corresponded to an open/closed-state voltage difference of 19 mV and to 3.5 gating charges moving through the field. When several channels were inserted into the bilayer, a large fraction of the membrane conductance became voltage insensitive. These results show that the isolated channel units are highly voltage dependent and are consistent with the assumption that aggregated connexons interact through links which prevent voltage-sensitive conformational changes.  相似文献   

18.
Channel access resistance has been measured to estimate the characteristic size of a single ion channel. We compare channel conductance in the presence of nonpenetrating water-soluble polymers with that obtained for polymer-free electrolyte solution. The contribution of the access resistance to the total alamethicin channel resistance is approximately 10% for first three open channel levels. The open alamethicin channel radii inferred for these first three levels from the access resistance are 6.3, 10.3, and 11.4 A. The dependence of channel conductance on polymer molecular weight also allows evaluation of the channel dimensions from polymer exclusion. Despite varying conductance, it was shown that steric radii of the alamethicin channel at different conductance levels remain approximately unchanged. These results support a model of the alamethicin channel as an array of closely packed parallel pores of nearly uniform diameter.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The voltage-dependence of channel formation by alamethicin and its natural analogues can be described by a dipole flip-flop gating model, based on electric field-induced transbilayer orientational movements of single molecules. These field-induced changes in orientation result from the large permanent dipole moment of alamethicin, which adopts -helical conformation in hydrophobic medium. It was, therefore, supposed that the only structural requirement for voltage-dependent formation of alamethicin-type channels might be a rigid lipophilic helical segment of minimum length.In order to test this hypothesis we synthesized a family of lipophilic polypeptides—Boc-(Ala-Aib-Ala-Aib-Ala) n -OMe,n=1–4—which adopt -helical conformation forn=2–4 and studied their interaction with planar lipid bilayers. Surprisingly, despite their large difference in chain length, all four polypeptides showed qualitatively similar behavior. At low field strength of the membrane electric field these polypeptides induce a significant, almost voltage-independent increase of the bilayer conductivity. At high field strength, however, a strongly voltage-dependent conductance increase occurs similar to that observed with alamethicin. It results from the opening of a multitude of ion translocating channels within the membrane phase.The steady-state voltage-dependent conductance depends on the 8th–9th power of polypeptide concentration and involves the transfer of 4–5 formal elementary charges. From the power dependences on polypeptide concentration and applied voltage of the time constants in voltage-jump current-relaxation experiments, it is concluded that channels could be formed from preexisting dodecamer aggregates by the simultaneous reorientation of six formal elementary charges. Channels exhibit large conductance values of several nS, which become larger towards shorter polypeptide chain length. A mean channel diameter of 19 Å is estimated corresponding roughly to the lumen diameter of a barrel comprised of 10 -helical staves. Similar to experiments with the N-terminal Boc-derivative of alamethicin we did not observe the burst sequence of nonintegral conductance steps typical of natural (N-terminal Ac-Aib)-alamethicin. Saturation in current/voltage curves as well as current inactivation in voltage-jump current-relaxation experiments are found. This may be understood by assuming that channels are generated as dodecamers but, while reaching the steady state, reduce their size to that of an octamer or nonamer. We conclude that the overall behavior of these synthetic polypeptides is very similar to that of alamethicin. They exhibit the same concentration and voltage-dependences but lack the stabilizing principle of resolved channel states characteristic of alamethicin.  相似文献   

20.
Alamethicin, a peptide antibiotic, partitions into artificial lipid bilayer membranes and into frog myelinated nerve membranes, inducing a voltage-dependent conductance. Discrete changes in conductance representing single-channel events with multiple open states can be detected in either frog node or lipid bilayer membranes. In 120 mM salt solution, the average conductance of a single channel is approximately 600 pS. The channel lifetimes are roughly two times longer in the node membrane than in a phosphatidylethanolamine bilayer at the same membrane potential. With 2 or 20 mM external Ca and internal CsCl, the alamethicin-induced conductance of frog nodal membrane inactivates. Inactivation is abolished by internal EGTA, suggesting that internal accumulation of calcium ions is responsible for the inactivation, through binding of Ca to negative internal surface charges. As a probe for both external and internal surface charges, alamethicin indicates a surface potential difference of approximately -20 to -30 mV, with the inner surface more negative. This surface charge asymmetry is opposite to the surface potential distribution near sodium channels.  相似文献   

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