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1.
Dermaseptin S9 (Drs S9) is an atypical cationic antimicrobial peptide with a long hydrophobic core and with a propensity to form amyloid-like fibrils. Here we investigated its membrane interaction using a variety of biophysical techniques. Rather surprisingly, we found that Drs S9 induces efficient permeabilisation in zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine (PC) vesicles, but not in anionic phosphatidylglycerol (PG) vesicles. We also found that the peptide inserts more efficiently in PC than in PG monolayers. Therefore, electrostatic interactions between the cationic Drs S9 and anionic membranes cannot explain the selectivity of the peptide towards bacterial membranes. CD spectroscopy, electron microscopy and ThT fluorescence experiments showed that the peptide adopts slightly more β-sheet and has a higher tendency to form amyloid-like fibrils in the presence of PC membranes as compared to PG membranes. Thus, induction of leakage may be related to peptide aggregation. The use of a pre-incorporation protocol to reduce peptide/peptide interactions characteristic of aggregates in solution resulted in more α-helix formation and a more pronounced effect on the cooperativity of the gel-fluid lipid phase transition in all lipid systems tested. Calorimetric data together with 2H- and 31P-NMR experiments indicated that the peptide has a significant impact on the dynamic organization of lipid bilayers, albeit slightly less for zwitterionic than for anionic membranes. Taken together, our data suggest that in particular in membranes of zwitterionic lipids the peptide binds in an aggregated state resulting in membrane leakage. We propose that also the antimicrobial activity of Drs S9 may be a result of binding of the peptide in an aggregated state, but that specific binding and aggregation to bacterial membranes is regulated not by anionic lipids but by as yet unknown factors.  相似文献   

2.
Maintenance of electrochemical potential gradients across lipid membranes is critical for signal transduction and energy generation in biological systems. However, because ions with widely varying membrane permeabilities all contribute to the electrostatic potential, it can be difficult to measure the influence of diffusion of a single ion type across the bilayer. To understand the electrodiffusion of H+ across lipid bilayers, we used a pH-sensitive fluorophore to monitor the lumenal pH in vesicles after a stepwise change in the bulk pH. In vesicles containing the ion channel gramicidin, the lumenal pH rapidly approached the external pH. In contrast, the lumen of intact vesicles showed a two stage pH response: an initial rapid change occurred over ~ 1 min, followed by a much slower change over ~ 24 h. We provide a quantitative interpretation of these results based on the Goldman–Hodgkin–Katz ion fluxes discharging the electrical capacitance of the bilayer membrane. This interpretation provides an estimate of the permeability of the membranes to Na+ and Cl ions of ~ 10− 8 cm/s, which is ~ 3 orders of magnitude faster than previous reports. We discuss possible mechanisms to account for this considerably higher permeability in vesicle membranes.  相似文献   

3.
Sifuvirtide is a gp41 based peptide that inhibits HIV-1 fusion with the host cells and is currently under clinical trials. Previous studies showed that sifuvirtide partitions preferably to saturated phosphatidylcholine lipid membranes, instead of fluid-phase lipid vesicles. We extended the study to the interaction of the peptide with circulating blood cells, by using the dipole potential sensitive probe di-8-ANEPPS. Sifuvirtide decreased the dipole potential of erythrocyte and lymphocyte membranes in a concentration dependent manner, demonstrating its interaction. Also, the lipid selectivity of the peptide towards more rigid phosphatidylcholines was confirmed based on the dipole potential variations. Overall, the interaction of the peptide with the cell membranes is a contribution of different lipid preferences that presumably directs the peptide towards raft-like domains where the receptors are located, facilitating the reach of the peptide to its molecular target, the gp41 in its pre-fusion conformation.  相似文献   

4.
Oxyopinins (Oxki1 and Oxki2) are antimicrobial peptides isolated from the crude venom of the wolf spider Oxyopes kitabensis. The effect of oxyopinins on lipid bilayers was investigated using high-sensitivity titration calorimetry and 31P solid-state NMR spectroscopy. High-sensitivity titration calorimetry experiments showed that the binding of oxyopinins was exothermic, and the binding enthalpies (ΔH) to 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs) were − 18.1 kcal/mol and − 15.0 kcal/mol for Oxki1 and Oxki2, respectively, and peptide partition coefficient (Kp) was found to be 3.9 × 103 M− 1. 31P NMR spectra of 1,2-dielaidoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DEPE) membranes in the presence of oxyopinins indicated that they induced a positive curvature in lipid bilayers. The induced positive curvature was stronger in the presence of Oxki2 than in the presence of Oxki1. 31P NMR spectra of phosphaditylcholine (PC) membranes in the presence of Oxki2 showed that Oxki2 produced micellization of membranes at low peptide concentrations, but unsaturated PC membranes or acidic phospholipids prevented micellization from occurring. Furthermore, 31P NMR spectra using membrane lipids from E. coli suggested that Oxki1 was more disruptive to bacterial membranes than Oxki2. These results strongly correlate to the known biological activity of the oxyopinins.  相似文献   

5.
Tritrpticin and indolicidin are short 13-residue tryptophan-rich antimicrobial peptides that hold potential as future alternatives for antibiotics. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) has been applied as the main tool in this study to investigate the thermodynamics of the interaction of these two cathelicidin peptides as well as five tritrpticin analogs with large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs), representing model and natural anionic membranes. The anionic LUVs were composed of (a) 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine/1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoglycerol (POPE/POPG) (7:3) and (b) natural E. coli polar lipid extract. 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) was used to make model zwitterionic membranes. Binding isotherms were obtained to characterize the antimicrobial peptide binding to the LUVs, which then allowed for calculation of the thermodynamic parameters of the interaction. All peptides exhibited substantially stronger binding to anionic POPE/POPG and E. coli membrane systems than to the zwitterionic POPC system due to strong electrostatic attractions between the highly positively charged peptides and the negatively charged membrane surface, and results with tritrpticin derivatives further revealed the effects of various amino acid substitutions on membrane binding. No significant improvement was observed upon increasing the Tritrp peptide charge from + 4 to + 5. Replacement of Arg residues with Lys did not substantially change peptide binding to anionic vesicles but moderately decreased the binding to zwitterionic LUVs. Pro to Ala substitutions in tritrpticin, allowing the peptide to adopt an α-helical structure, resulted in a significant increase of the binding to both anionic and zwitterionic vesicles and therefore reduced the selectivity for bacterial and mammalian membranes. In contrast, substitution of Trp with other aromatic amino acids significantly decreased the peptide's ability to bind to anionic LUVs and essentially eliminated binding to zwitterionic LUVs. The ITC results were consistent with the outcome of fluorescence spectroscopy membrane binding and perturbation studies. Overall, our work showed that a natural E. coli polar lipid extract as a bacterial membrane model was advantageous compared to the simpler and more widely used POPE/POPG lipid system.  相似文献   

6.
We applied precise densimetry and ultrasound velocimetry methods to study the interaction of a synthetic α-helical transmembrane peptide, acetyl-K2-L24-K2-amide (L24), with model bilayer lipid membranes. The large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) utilized were composed of a homologous series of n-saturated diacylphosphatidylcholines (PCs). PCs whose hydrocarbon chains contained from 13 to 16 carbon atoms, thus producing phospholipid bilayers of different thicknesses and gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition temperatures. This allowed us to analyze how the difference between the hydrophobic length of the peptide and the hydrophobic thickness of the lipid bilayer influences the thermodynamical and mechanical properties of the membranes. We showed that the incorporation of L24 decreases the temperature and cooperativity of the main phase transition of all LUVs studied. The presence of L24 in the bilayer also caused an increase of the specific volume and of the volume compressibility in the gel state bilayers. In the liquid crystalline state, the peptide decreases the specific volume at relatively higher peptide concentration (mole ratio L24:PC = 1:50). The overall volume compressibility of the peptide-containing lipid bilayers in the liquid-crystalline state was in general higher in comparison with pure membranes. There was, however, a tendency for the volume compressibility of these lipid bilayers to decrease with higher peptide content in comparison with bilayers of lower peptide concentration. For one lipid composition, we also compared the thermodynamical and mechanical properties of LUVs and large multilamellar vesicles (MLVs) with and without L24. As expected, a higher cooperativity of the changes of the thermodynamical and mechanical parameters took place for MLVs in comparison with LUVs. These results are in agreement with previously reported DSC and 2H NMR spectroscopy study of the interaction of the L24 and structurally related peptides with phosphatidylcholine bilayers. An apparent discrepancy between 2H NMR spectroscopy and compressibility data in the liquid crystalline state may be connected with the complex and anisotropic nature of macroscopic mechanical properties of the membranes. The observed changes in membrane mechanical properties induced by the presence of L24 suggest that around each peptide a distorted region exists that involves at least 2 layers of lipid molecules.  相似文献   

7.
The antimicrobial activity of the anionic peptide, AP1 (GEQGALAQFGEWL), was investigated. AP1 was found to kill Staphylococcus aureus with an MLC of 3 mM and to induce maximal surface pressure changes of 3.8 mN m−1 over 1200 s in monolayers formed from lipid extract of S. aureus membranes. FTIR spectroscopy showed the peptide to be α-helical (100%) in the presence of vesicles formed from this lipid extract and to induce increases in their fluidity (Δν circa 0.5 cm−1). These combined data show that AP1 is able to function as an α-helical antimicrobial peptide against Gram-positive bacteria and suggest that the killing mechanism used by the peptide involves interactions with the membrane lipid headgroup region. Moreover, this killing mechanism differs strongly from that previously reported for AP1 against Gram-negative bacteria, indicating the importance of considering the effects of membrane lipid composition when investigating the structure/function relationships of antimicrobial peptides.  相似文献   

8.
Omiganan pentahydrochloride (ILRWPWWPWRRK-NH2·5Cl) is an antimicrobial peptide currently in phase III clinical trials. This study aims to unravel the mechanism of action of this drug at the membrane level and address the eventual protective role of peptidoglycan in cell walls. The interaction of omiganan pentahydrochloride with bacterial and mammalian membrane models - large unilamellar vesicles of different POPC:POPG proportions - was characterized by UV-Vis fluorescence spectroscopy. The molar ratio partition constants obtained for the two anionic bacterial membrane models were very high ((18.9 ± 1.3) × 103 and (43.5 ± 8.7) × 103) and about one order of magnitude greater than for the neutral mammalian models ((3.7 ± 0.4) × 103 for 100% POPC bilayers). At low lipid:peptide ratios there were significant deviations from the usual hyperbolic-like partition behavior of peptide vesicle titration curves, especially for the most anionic systems. Membrane saturation can account for such observations and mathematical models were derived to further characterize the peptide-lipid interaction under those conditions; a possible relation between saturation and MIC was deduced; this was supported by differential quenching studies of peptide internalization. Interaction with the bacterial cell wall was assessed using Staphylococcus aureus peptidoglycan extracts as a model. A strong partition towards the peptidoglycan mesh was observed, but not as large as for the membrane models.  相似文献   

9.
Phosphorus NMR spectroscopy was used to characterize the importance of electrostatic interactions in the lytic activity of melittin, a cationic peptide. The micellization induced by melittin has been characterized for several lipid mixtures composed of saturated phosphatidylcholine (PC) and a limited amount of charged lipid. For these systems, the thermal polymorphism is similar to the one observed for pure PC: small comicelles are stable in the gel phase and extended bilayers are formed in the liquid crystalline phase. Vesicle surface charge density influences strongly the micellization. Our results show that the presence of negatively charged lipids (phospholipid or unprotonated fatty acid) reduces the proportion of lysed vesicles. Conversely, the presence of positively charged lipids leads to a promotion of the lytic activity of the peptide. The modulation of the lytic effect is proposed to originate from the electrostatic interactions between the peptide and the bilayer surface. Attractive interactions anchor the peptide at the surface and, as a consequence, inhibit its lytic activity. Conversely, repulsive interactions favor the redistribution of melittin into the bilayer, causing enhanced lysis. A quantitative analysis of the interaction between melittin and negatively charged bilayers suggests that electroneutrality is reached at the surface, before micellization. The surface charge density of the lipid layer appears to be a determining factor for the lipid/peptide stoichiometry of the comicelles; a decrease in the lipid/peptide stoichiometry in the presence of negatively charged lipids appears to be a general consequence of the higher affinity of melittin for these membranes.  相似文献   

10.
The lateral lipid distribution within dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DPPE)/dipalmitoylphosphatidylserine (DPPS) vesicle membranes was investigated under the influence of Ca2+ using a lipid cross-linking method. To characterize the phase transition in DPPE/DPPS vesicles and to correlate the different phase states of the membrane lipids with the obtained lipid distribution ESR measurements using a fatty acid spin label were carried out. It is shown that Ca2+ has a significant influence on the lateral lipid distribution within the fluid phase of the membrane lipids; instead of a slight alternating lipid arrangement in absence of Ca2+ due to the electrostatic interaction between the DPPS headgroups after addition of Ca2+ a lateral cluster structure is characteristic of the fluid phase.  相似文献   

11.
Peptidyl-glycine-leucine-carboxyamide (PGLa), isolated from granular skin glands of Xenopus laevis, is practically devoid of secondary structure in aqueous solution and in the presence of zwitterionic phospholipids, when added exogenously, but adopts an α-helix in the presence of anionic lipids. The peptide was shown to exhibit antifungal activity and to have antimicrobial activity towards both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. As a broad variety of peptides is found in the secretions of amphibian skin combinatorial treatment of PGLa and magainin 2 was studied showing enhanced activity by a heterodimer formation. Thus production of mutually recognizing peptides seems to be an effective way in nature to increase selective membrane activity. Biophysical studies on membrane mimics demonstrated that PGLa can discriminate between different lipid species, preferentially interacting with negatively charged lipids, which are major components of bacterial but not mammalian cell membranes. This emphasizes the role of electrostatic interactions as a major determinant to trigger the affinity of antimicrobial peptides towards bacterial membranes. PGLa induced the formation of a quasi-interdigitated phase in phosphatidylglycerol bilayers below their chain melting transition, which is due to the creation of voids below the peptide being aligned parallel to the membrane surface. In the fluid phase of phosphatidylglycerol the peptide inserts perpendicularly into the bilayer above a threshold concentration, which results in a hydrophobic mismatch of the peptide length and bilayer core for lipids ≤ C16. This mismatch is compensated by stretching of the acyl chains and in turn thickening of the bilayer demonstrating that membrane thinning cannot be taken generally as the hallmark of pore formation by antimicrobial peptides. Furthermore, PGLa was shown to affect membrane curvature strain of phosphatidylethanolamine, another main lipid component of bacterial membranes, where a cubic phase coexists with the fluid bilayer phase. Investigations on living Escherichia coli showed distinct changes in cell envelope morphology, when treated with the peptide. In a first stage loss of surface stiffness and consequently of topographic features was observed, followed in a second stage by permeabilization of the outer membrane and rupture of the inner (cytoplasmic) membrane supposedly by the mechanism(s) derived from model studies.  相似文献   

12.
Ortiz A  Cajal Y  Haro I  Reig F  Alsina MA 《Biopolymers》2000,53(6):455-466
The interaction of the multiple antigenic peptide MAP4VP3 with lipid membranes has been studied by spectroscopic techniques. MAP4VP3 is a multimeric peptide that corresponds to four units of the sequence 110-121 of the capsid protein VP3 of hepatitis A virus. In order to evaluate the electrostatic and hydrophobic components on the lipid-peptide interaction, small unilamelar vesicles of different compositions, including zwitterionic dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), anionic dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/phatidylinositol (DPPC:PI 9:1), and cationic dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/stearylamine (DPPC:SA 9.5:0.5), were used as membrane models. Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence changes and energy transfer experiments show that MAP4VP3 binds to all three types of vesicles with the same stoichiometry, indicating that the electrostatic component of the interaction is not important for binding of this anionic peptide. Steady-state polarization experiments with vesicles labeled with 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene or with 1-anilino-8-naphtalene sulphonic acid indicate that MAP4VP3 induces a change in the packing of the bilayers, with a decrease in the fluidity of the lipids and an increase in the temperature of phase transition in all the vesicles. The percentage of lipid exposed to the bulk aqueous phase is around 60% in intact vesicles, and it does not change upon binding of MAP4VP3 to DPPC vesicles, indicating that the peptide does not alter the permeability of the membrane. An increase in the amount of lipid exposed to the aqueous phase in cationic vesicles indicates either lipid flip-flop or disruption of the vesicles. Binding to DPPC vesicles occurs without leakage of entrapped carboxyfluorescein, even at high mol fractions of peptide. However, a time-dependent leakage is seen with cationic DPPC/SA and anionic DPPC/PI vesicles, indicating that the peptide induces membrane destabilization and not lipid flip-flop. Resonance energy transfer experiments show that MAP4VP3 leakage from cationic vesicles is due to membrane fusion, whereas leakage from anionic vesicles is not accompanied by lipid mixing. Results show that MAP4VP3 interacts strongly with the lipid components of the membrane, and although binding is not of electrostatic nature, the bound form of the peptide has different activity depending on the membrane net charge; thus, it is membrane disruptive in cationic and anionic vesicles, whereas no destabilizing effect is seen in DPPC vesicles.  相似文献   

13.
We have investigated the influence of the neurotoxic Alzheimer's disease peptide amyloid-β (25-35) on the dynamics of phospholipid membranes by means of quasi-elastic neutron scattering in the picosecond time-scale. Samples of pure phospholipids (DMPC/DMPS) and samples with amyloid-β (25-35) peptide included have been compared. With two different orientations of the samples the directional dependence of the dynamics was probed. The sample temperature was varied between 290 K and 320 K to cover both the gel phase and the liquid-crystalline phase of the lipid membranes. The model for describing the dynamics combines a long-range translational diffusion of the lipid molecules and a spatially restricted diffusive motion. Amyloid-β (25-35) peptide affects significantly the ps-dynamics of oriented lipid membranes in different ways. It accelerates the lateral diffusion especially in the liquid-crystalline phase. This is very important for all kinds of protein-protein interactions which are enabled and strongly influenced by the lateral diffusion such as signal and energy transducing cascades. Amyloid-β (25-35) peptide also increases the local lipid mobility as probed by variations of the vibrational motions with a larger effect in the out-of-plane direction. Thus, the insertion of amyloid-β (25-35) peptide changes not only the structure of phospholipid membranes as previously demonstrated by us employing neutron diffraction (disordering effect on the mosaicity of the lipid bilayer system) but also the dynamics inside the membranes. The amyloid-β (25-35) peptide induced membrane alteration even at only 3 mol% might be involved in the pathology of Alzheimer's disease as well as be a clue in early diagnosis and therapy.  相似文献   

14.
The interactions of the antimicrobial peptides aurein 1.2, citropin 1.1 and maculatin 1.1 with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC), dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol (DMPG) and dimyristoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DMPE) were studied by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. The effects of these peptides on the thermotropic phase behavior of DMPC and DMPG are qualitatively similar and manifested by the suppression of the pretransition, and by peptide concentration-dependent decreases in the temperature, cooperativity and enthalpy of the gel/liquid-crystalline phase transition. However, at all peptide concentrations, anionic DMPG bilayers are more strongly perturbed than zwitterionic DMPC bilayers, consistent with membrane surface charge being an important aspect of the interactions of these peptides with phospholipids. However, at all peptide concentrations, the perturbation of the thermotropic phase behavior of zwitterionic DMPE bilayers is weak and discernable only when samples are exposed to high temperatures. FTIR spectroscopy indicates that these peptides are unstructured in aqueous solution and that they fold into α-helices when incorporated into lipid membranes. All three peptides undergo rapid and extensive H-D exchange when incorporated into D2O-hydrated phospholipid bilayers, suggesting that they are located in solvent-accessible environments, most probably in the polar/apolar interfacial regions of phospholipid bilayers. The perturbation of model lipid membranes by these peptides decreases in magnitude in the order maculatin 1.1 > aurein 1.2 > citropin 1.1, whereas the capacity to inhibit Acholeplasma laidlawii B growth decreases in the order maculatin 1.1 > aurein 1.2 ≅ citropin 1.1. The higher efficacy of maculatin 1.1 in disrupting model and biological membranes can be rationalized by its larger size and higher net charge. However, despite its smaller size and lower net charge, aurein 1.2 is more disruptive of model lipid membranes than citropin 1.1 and exhibits comparable antimicrobial activity, probably because aurein 1.2 has a higher propensity for partitioning into phospholipid membranes.  相似文献   

15.
Polar carotenoid pigment - canthaxanthin - has been found to interfere with the organization of biological membranes, in particular of the retina membranes of an eye of primates. The organization of lipid membranes formed with dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and egg yolk phosphatidylcholine containing canthaxanthin was studied by means of several techniques including: electronic absorption spectroscopy, linear dichroism, X-ray diffractometry, 1H-NMR spectroscopy and FTIR spectroscopy. It appears that canthaxanthin present in the lipid membranes at relatively low concentration (below 1 mol% with respect to lipid) modifies significantly physical properties of the membranes. In particular, canthaxanthin (i) exerts restrictions to the segmental molecular motion of lipid molecules both in the headgroup region and in the hydrophobic core of the bilayer, (ii) promotes extended conformation of alkyl lipid chains, (iii) modifies the surface of the lipid membranes (in particular in the gel state, Lβ´) and promotes the aggregation of lipid vesicles. It is concluded that canthaxanthin incorporated into lipid membranes is distributed among two pools: one spanning the lipid bilayer roughly perpendicularly to the surface of the membrane and one parallel to the membrane, localized in the headgroup region. The population of the horizontal fraction increases with the increase in the concentration of the pigment in the lipid phase. Such a conclusion is supported by the linear dichroism analysis of the oriented lipid multibilayers containing canthaxanthin: The mean angle between the dipole transition moment and the axis normal to the plane of the membrane was determined as 20 ± 3° at 0.5 mol% and 47 ± 3° at 2 mol% canthaxanthin. The analysis of the absorption spectra of canthaxanthin in the lipid phase and 1H-NMR spectra of lipids point to the exceptionally low aggregation threshold of the pigment in the membrane environment (∼1 mol%). All results demonstrate a very strong modifying effect of canthaxanthin with respect to the dynamic and structural properties of lipid membranes.  相似文献   

16.
The cecropin-melittin hybrid antimicrobial peptide BP100 (H-KKLFKKILKYL-NH2) is selective for Gram-negative bacteria, negatively charged membranes, and weakly hemolytic. We studied BP100 conformational and functional properties upon interaction with large unilamellar vesicles, LUVs, and giant unilamellar vesicles, GUVs, containing variable proportions of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and negatively charged phosphatidylglycerol (PG). CD and NMR spectra showed that upon binding to PG-containing LUVs BP100 acquires α-helical conformation, the helix spanning residues 3–11. Theoretical analyses indicated that the helix is amphipathic and surface-seeking. CD and dynamic light scattering data evinced peptide and/or vesicle aggregation, modulated by peptide:lipid ratio and PG content. BP100 decreased the absolute value of the zeta potential (ζ) of LUVs with low PG contents; for higher PG, binding was analyzed as an ion-exchange process. At high salt, BP100-induced LUVS leakage requires higher peptide concentration, indicating that both electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions contribute to peptide binding. While a gradual release took place at low peptide:lipid ratios, instantaneous loss occurred at high ratios, suggesting vesicle disruption. Optical microscopy of GUVs confirmed BP100-promoted disruption of negatively charged membranes. The mechanism of action of BP100 is determined by both peptide:lipid ratio and negatively charged lipid content. While gradual release results from membrane perturbation by a small number of peptide molecules giving rise to changes in acyl chain packing, lipid clustering (leading to membrane defects), and/or membrane thinning, membrane disruption results from a sequence of events – large-scale peptide and lipid clustering, giving rise to peptide-lipid patches that eventually would leave the membrane in a carpet-like mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
The binding of the myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS) to mixed, fluid, phospholipid membranes is modeled with a recently developed Monte Carlo simulation scheme. The central domain of MARCKS is both basic (ζ = +13) and hydrophobic (five Phe residues), and is flanked with two long chains, one ending with the myristoylated N-terminus. This natively unfolded protein is modeled as a flexible chain of “beads” representing the amino acid residues. The membranes contain neutral (ζ = 0), monovalent (ζ = −1), and tetravalent (ζ = −4) lipids, all of which are laterally mobile. MARCKS-membrane interaction is modeled by Debye-Hückel electrostatic potentials and semiempirical hydrophobic energies. In agreement with experiment, we find that membrane binding is mediated by electrostatic attraction of the basic domain to acidic lipids and membrane penetration of its hydrophobic moieties. The binding is opposed by configurational entropy losses and electrostatic membrane repulsion of the two long chains, and by lipid demixing upon adsorption. The simulations provide a physical model for how membrane-adsorbed MARCKS attracts several PIP2 lipids (ζ = −4) to its vicinity, and how phosphorylation of the central domain (ζ = +13 to ζ = +7) triggers an “electrostatic switch”, which weakens both the membrane interaction and PIP2 sequestration. This scheme captures the essence of “discreteness of charge” at membrane surfaces and can examine the formation of membrane-mediated multicomponent macromolecular complexes that function in many cellular processes.  相似文献   

18.
Bak is a pro-apoptotic protein widely distributed in different cell types that is associated with the mitochondrial outer membrane, apparently through a C-terminal hydrophobic domain. We used infrared spectroscopy to study the secondary structure of a synthetic peptide (+3HN-188ILNVLVVLGVVLLGQFVVRRFFKS211-COO-) with the same sequence as the C-terminal domain of Bak. The spectrum of this peptide in D2O buffer shows an amide I′ band with a maximum at 1636 cm−1, which clearly indicates the predominance of an extended β-structure in aqueous solvent. However, the peptide incorporated in multilamellar dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) membranes shows a different amide I′ band spectrum, with a maximum at 1658 cm−1, indicating a predominantly α-helical structure induced by its interaction with the membrane. It was observed that through differential scanning calorimetry the transition of the phospholipid model membrane was broadened in the presence of the peptide. Fluorescence polarization of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH) in fluid DMPC vesicles showed that increasing concentrations of the peptide produced increased polarization values, which is compatible with the peptide being inserted into the membrane. High concentrations of the peptide considerably broaden the phase transition of DMPC multilamellar vesicles, and DPH polarization increased, especially at temperatures above the Tc transition temperature of the pure phospholipid. The addition of peptide destabilized unilamellar vesicles and released encapsulated carboxyfluorescein. These results indicate that this domain is able to insert itself into membranes, where it adopts an α-helical structure and considerably perturbs the physical properties of the membrane.  相似文献   

19.
To investigate the mechanism of interaction of gramicidin S-like antimicrobial peptides with biological membranes, a series of five decameric cyclic cationic β-sheet-β-turn peptides with all possible combinations of aromatic D-amino acids, Cyclo(Val-Lys-Leu-D-Ar1-Pro-Val-Lys-Leu-D-Ar2-Pro) (Ar ≡ Phe, Tyr, Trp), were synthesized. Conformations of these cyclic peptides were comparable in aqueous solutions and lipid vesicles. Isothermal titration calorimetry measurements revealed entropy-driven binding of cyclic peptides to POPC and POPE/POPG lipid vesicles. Binding of peptides to both vesicle systems was endothermic—exceptions were peptides containing the Trp-Trp and Tyr-Trp pairs with exothermic binding to POPC vesicles. Application of one- and two-site binding (partitioning) models to binding isotherms of exothermic and endothermic binding processes, respectively, resulted in determination of peptide-lipid membrane binding constants (Kb). The Kb1 and Kb2 values for endothermic two-step binding processes corresponded to high and low binding affinities (Kb1 ≥ 100 Kb2). Conformational change of cyclic peptides in transferring from buffer to lipid bilayer surfaces was estimated using fluorescence resonance energy transfer between the Tyr-Trp pair in one of the peptide constructs. The cyclic peptide conformation expands upon adsorption on lipid bilayer surface and interacts more deeply with the outer monolayer causing bilayer deformation, which may lead to formation of nonspecific transient peptide-lipid porelike zones causing membrane lysis.  相似文献   

20.
A new defensin Lc-def, isolated from germinated seeds of the lentil Lens culinaris, has molecular mass 5440.4 Da and consists of 47 amino acid residues. Lc-def and its 15N-labeled analog were overexpressed in Escherichia coli. Antimicrobial activity of the recombinant protein was examined, and its spatial structure, dynamics, and interaction with lipid vesicles were studied by NMR spectroscopy. It was shown that Lc-def is active against fungi, but does not inhibit the growth of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. The peptide is monomeric in aqueous solution and contains one α-helix and triple-stranded β-sheet, which form cysteine-stabilized αβ motif (CSαβ) previously found in other plant defensins. The sterically neighboring loop1 and loop3 protrude from the defensin core and demonstrate significant mobility on the μs–ms timescale. Lc-def does not bind to the zwitterionic lipid (POPC) vesicles but interacts with the partially anionic (POPC/DOPG, 7:3) membranes under low-salt conditions. The Lc-def antifungal activity might be mediated through electrostatic interaction with anionic lipid components of fungal membranes.  相似文献   

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