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1.
The interaction between beta-lactoglobulin and sonicated aqueous dispersions of the gel phase forming monoglyceride monostearoylglycerol were studied using isothermal titration calorimetry, direct binding experiments, differential scanning calorimetry, leakage of a fluorescent dye and solid-state (31)P- and (2)H-NMR. In the absence of a charged amphiphile, monostearoylglycerol forms a precipitate. Under these conditions, no interaction with beta-lactoglobulin was observed. In the presence of the negatively charged amphiphile dicetylphosphate, the gel phase monostearoylglycerol formed stable and closed, probably unilamellar, vesicles with an average diameter of 465 nm. beta-Lactoglobulin interacts with these bilayer structures at pH 4, where the protein is positively charged, as well as at pH 7 where the protein is negatively charged. Under both conditions of pH, the binding affinity of beta-lactoglobulin is in the micromolar range as observed with ITC and the direct binding assay. At pH 4, two binding modes were found, one of which is determined with ITC while the direct binding assay determines the net result of both. The first binding mode is observed with ITC and is characterized by a large binding enthalpy, a decreased enthalpy of the MSG L(beta) to L(alpha) phase transition and leakage of a fluorescent dye. These characteristics are explained by a beta-lactoglobulin induced partial L(beta) to coagel phase transition that results from a specific electrostatic interaction between the protein and the charged amphiphile. This explanation is confirmed by solid-state (2)H-NMR using 1-monostearoylglycerol with a fully deuterated acyl chain. Upon interaction with beta-lactoglobulin, the isotropic signal in the (2)H-NMR spectrum of the monostearoylglycerol-dicetylphosphate mixture partially transforms into a broad anisotropic signal which could be assigned to coagel formation. The second binding mode probably results from an aspecific electrostatic attraction between the negatively charged bilayer and the positively charged protein and causes the precipitation of the dispersion. At pH 7, only the first binding mode is observed.  相似文献   

2.
Acyl chain dynamics of the trans-unsaturated lipid, dielaidoylphosphatidylcholine (DEPC), were studied by conventional and saturation transfer electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy of aqueous dispersions of DEPC spin labeled with lecithins having doxyl groups at positions 5, 10, and 14 on the sn-2 chain. The gel to liquid crystalline transition is concerted with simultaneous increases in rotational motion about the long axis of the acyl chain (libration) and in gauche-trans conformational interconversions (wobble). Relative to saturated lecithins at similar reduced temperatures the double bond (a) slowed libration by an order of magnitude in both phases, while wobble motions were several times slower, and (b)-produced a pronounced stiffness of the acyl chain near the double bond. Ethanol (0-1.6 M), in addition to its well-known colligative effect on the phase transition, was found to decrease the bilayer order in a concentration-dependent manner. This effect was smaller in the gel than in the liquid crystalline phase, most pronounced next to the double bond, and weakest deep in the bilayer. Ethanol affected slow motions little in the gel phase but wobble and libration correlation times were markedly decreased in the liquid crystalline phase.  相似文献   

3.
The ether-linked phosphatidylcholines 1-eicosyl-2-dodecyl-rac-glycero-3-phosphocholine (EDPC) and 1-dodecyl-2-eicosyl-rac-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DEPC) have been investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and X-ray diffraction. DSC of hydrated EDPC shows a single endothermic transition at 34.8 degrees C (delta H = 11.2 kcal/mol) after storage at -4 degrees C while DEPC shows three endothermic transitions at 7.7 and approximately 9.0 degrees C (combined delta H approximately 0.4 kcal/mol) and at 25.2 degrees C (delta H = 4.7 kcal/mol). Both the single transition of EDPC and the two higher temperature transitions of DEPC are reversible, while the approximately 7.7 degrees C transition of DEPC increases in enthalpy on low-temperature incubation. At 23 degrees C, X-ray diffraction of hydrated EDPC shows a sharp reflection at 4.2 A together with lamellar reflections corresponding to a bilayer periodicity, d = 56.2 A. Electron density profiles derived from swelling experiments show a phosphate-phosphate intrabilayer distance, dp-p, of 36 A at all hydrations. This, together with calculated lipid thickness and molecular area considerations, suggests an interdigitated, three chains per head group, bilayer gel phase, L beta*, with no hydrocarbon chain tilt. This is structurally analogous to the bilayer gel phase of hydrated 18:0/10:0 ester PC [McIntosh, T. J., Simon, S. A., Ellington, J. C., Jr., & Porter, N. A. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 4038]. In contrast, DEPC at -4 degrees C shows an L beta' bilayer gel phase with tilted hydrocarbon chains (d = 61.1 A). However, this transforms above 9 degrees C to an interdigitated, triple-chain, L beta* bilayer gel phase (identical with that of EDPC) with d = 56.6 A and a phosphate-phosphate distance of 36 A. Above their respective chain melting transitions, Tm, EDPC and DEPC exhibit liquid-crystalline L alpha bilayer phases with d = 64.5 and 65.0 A at 55 and 45 degrees C, respectively. The ability of both EDPC and DEPC to form triple-chain interdigitated gel-state bilayers suggests that the conformational inequivalence at the sn-1 and sn-2 positions is less pronounced in the ether-linked PCs compared to the ester-linked PCs, where only one of the positional isomers, e.g., 18:0/10:0 PC but not 10:0/18:0 PC, forms the triple-chain structure (J. Mattai, unpublished results). Thus, a different conformation around the glycerol is predicted for ether-linked PC compared to ester-linked PC.  相似文献   

4.
Antifreeze proteins have been reported to be capable of maintaining the membrane integrity of cold sensitive mammalian cells when exposed to hypothermic temperatures. However the mechanism(s) whereby these proteins exert this protective effect is unknown. The present study used liposomes as a model system to examine the nature of the interactions between four antifreeze (glyco)protein types (AFP I, II, III and AFGP) and albumin, with lipid membranes. Fluorescein isothiocyanate labelling indicated that all of the proteins bound to the three liposome types (dielaidoylphosphatidylcholine (DEPC), dielaidoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DEPE) and dielaidoylphosphatidylglycerol (DEPG)). AFGP was found to be highly effective at preventing leakage from all three liposome compositions as they were cooled through their phase transition temperatures. This was not the case for the other proteins. All four antifreeze types prevented zwitterionic DEPC liposomes from leaking as they were cooled through their phase transition temperature. However, albumin was equally as effective, indicating that this capacity was not unique to antifreeze proteins. All of the proteins, except AFGP, induced the negatively charged DEPG liposomes to leak prior to cooling, and were less effective than AFGP in preventing phase transition leakage from DEPE liposomes. It is proposed that many proteins, including antifreeze proteins, can protect zwitterionic liposomes, such as DEPC, by binding to the lipid bilayer thereby maintaining the ordered structure of the membrane during phase transition. However, when the membrane contains a negatively charged polar group, such as with DEPE and DEPG, proteins, although bound to them, may not be able to maintain sufficient membrane organization to prevent leakage during phase transition or, they may gain entry into the lipid bilayer, disrupt the structure and induce leakage. These results imply that the efficacy of antifreeze proteins in the cold protection of mammalian cells will not only depend on protein structure, but also on the lipid composition of the cell membrane.  相似文献   

5.
The cooperative binding process between the antibiotic peptide polymyxin-B and negatively-charged phosphatidic acid bilayers was investigated by differential thermal analysis and completed by fluorescence polarization measurements. The sigmoidal binding curves were analyzed in terms of the interaction energy within a domain formed by polymyxin and phosphatidic acid molecules. The formation of such a heterogeneous domain structure was favoured by high concentration of external monovalent ions. The cooperativity of the binding increased while a charge-induced decrease in the phase transition temperature of the pure lipid phase was observed with increasing ion concentration at a given pH. The reduced lateral coupling within the lipid bilayer in the presence of salt ions, as demonstrated by an increase in the lipid phase transition enthalpy, was considered to facilitate the cooperative domain formation. Moreover, an increase in the cooperativity of the polymyxin binding could be observed if phosphatidic acids of smaller chain length and thus of a lowered phase transition temperature were used. By the use of chemically-modified polymyxin we were able to demonstrate the effect of electrostatic and hydrophobic interaction. Acetylated polymyxin with a reduced positive charge was used to demonstrate the pure hydrophobic effect of polymyxin binding leading to a decrease in the phosphatidic acid phase transition temperature by about 20°C. The cooperativity of the binding was strongly reduced. Cleavage of the hydrophobic polymyxin tail yielded a colistinnonapeptide which caused an electrostatically-induced increase in the phosphatidic acid phase transition temperature. With unmodified polymyxin we observed the combined effects of electrostatic as well as hydrophobic interaction making this model system interesting for the understanding of lipid-protein interactions. Evidence is presented that the formation of the polymyxin-phosphatidic acid complex is a lateral phase separation phenomenon.  相似文献   

6.
Powl AM  East JM  Lee AG 《Biochemistry》2003,42(48):14306-14317
Trp fluorescence spectroscopy is a powerful tool to study the structures of membrane proteins and their interactions with the surrounding lipid bilayer. Many membrane proteins contain more than one Trp residue, making analysis of the fluorescence data more complex. The mechanosensitive channels MscL's of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (TbMscL) and Escherichia coli (EcMscL) contain no Trp residues. We have therefore introduced single Trp residues into the transmembrane regions of TbMscL and EcMscL to give the Trp-containing mutants F80W-TbMscL and F93W-EcMscL, respectively, which we show are highly suitable for measurements of lipid binding constants. In vivo cell viability assays in E. coli show that introduction of the Trp residues does not block function of the channels. The Trp-containing mutants have been reconstituted into lipid bilayers by mixing in cholate followed by dilution to re-form membranes. Cross-linking experiments suggest that the proteins retain their pentameric structures in phosphatidylcholines with chain lengths between C14 and C24, phosphatidylserines, and phosphatidic acid. Quenching of Trp fluorescence by brominated phospholipids suggests that the Trp residue in F80W-TbMscL is more exposed to the lipid bilayer than the Trp residue in F93W-EcMscL. Binding constants for phosphatidylcholines change with changing fatty acyl chain length, the strongest interaction for both TbMscL and EcMscL being observed with a chain of length C16, corresponding to a bilayer of hydrophobic thickness ca. 24 A, compared to a hydrophobic thickness for TbMscL of about 26 A estimated from the crystal structure. Lipid binding constants change by only a factor of 1.5 in the chain length range from C12 to C24, much less than expected from theories of hydrophobic mismatch in which the protein is treated as a rigid body. It is concluded that MscL distorts to match changes in bilayer thickness. The binding constants for dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine for both TbMscL and EcMscL relative to those for dioleoylphosphatidylcholine are close to 1. Quenching experiments suggest a single class of binding sites for phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylglycerol, and cardiolipin on TbMscL; binding constants are greater than those for phosphatidylcholine and decrease with increasing ionic strength, suggesting that charge interactions are important in binding these anionic phospholipids. Quenching experiments suggest two classes of lipid binding sites on TbMscL for phosphatidic acid, binding of phosphatidic acid being much less dependent on ionic strength than binding of phosphatidylserine.  相似文献   

7.
The cooperative binding process between the antibiotic peptide polymyxin-B and negatively-charged phosphatidic acid bilayers was investigated by differential thermal analysis and completed by fluorescence polarization measurements. The sigmoidal binding curves were analyzed in terms of the interaction energy within a domain formed by polymyxin and phosphatidic acid molecules. The formation of such a heterogeneous domain structure was favoured by high concentration of external monovalent ions. The cooperativity of the binding increased while a charge-induced decrease in the phase transition temperature of the pure lipid phase was observed with increasing ion concentration at a given pH. The reduced lateral coupling within the lipid bilayer in the presence of salt ions, as demonstrated by an increase in the lipid phase transition enthalpy, was considered to facilitate the cooperative domain formation. Moreover, an increase in the cooperativity of the polymyxin binding could be observed if phosphatidic acids of smaller chain length and thus of a lowered phase transition temperature were used. By the use of chemically-modified polymyxin we were able to demonstrate the effect of electrostatic and hydrophobic interaction. Acetylated polymyxin with a reduced positive charge was used to demonstrate the pure hydrophobic effect of polymyxin binding leading to a decrease in the phosphatidic acid phase transition temperature by about 20 degrees C. The cooperativity of the binding was strongly reduced. Cleavage of the hydrophobic polymyxin tail yielded a colistinnonapeptide which caused an electrostatically-induced increase in the phosphatidic acid phase transition temperature. With unmodified polymyxin we observed the combined effects of electrostatic as well as hydrophobic interaction making this model system interesting for the understanding of lipid-protein interactions. Evidence is presented that the formation of the polymyxin-phosphatidic acid complex is a lateral phase separation phenomenon.  相似文献   

8.
Basic amino acids play a key role in the binding of membrane associated proteins to negatively charged membranes. However, side chains of basic amino acids like lysine do not only provide a positive charge, but also a flexible hydrocarbon spacer that enables hydrophobic interactions. We studied the influence of hydrophobic contributions to the binding by varying the side chain length of pentapeptides with ammonium groups starting with lysine to lysine analogs with shorter side chains, namely ornithine (Orn), α,γ-diaminobutyric acid (Dab) and α, β-diaminopropionic acid (Dap). The binding to negatively charged phosphatidylglycerol (PG) membranes was investigated by calorimetry, FT-infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) and monolayer techniques. The binding was influenced by counteracting and sometimes compensating contributions. The influence of the bound peptides on the lipid phase behavior depends on the length of the peptide side chains. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) experiments showed exothermic and endothermic effects compensating to a different extent as a function of side chain length. The increase in lipid phase transition temperature was more significant for peptides with shorter side chains. FTIR-spectroscopy revealed changes in hydration of the lipid bilayer interface after peptide binding. Using monolayer techniques, the contributions of electrostatic and hydrophobic effects could clearly be observed. Peptides with short side chains induced a pronounced decrease in surface pressure of PG monolayers whereas peptides with additional hydrophobic interactions decreased the surface pressure much less or even lead to an increase, indicating insertion of the hydrophobic part of the side chain into the lipid monolayer.  相似文献   

9.
(+)-Totarol, a highly hydrophobic diterpenoid isolated from Podocarpus spp., is inhibitory towards the growth of diverse bacterial species. (+)-Totarol decreased the onset temperature of the gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition of DMPC and DMPG membranes and was immiscible with these lipids in the fluid phase at concentrations greater than 5 mol%. Different (+)-totarol/phospholipid mixtures having different stoichiometries appear to coexist with the pure phospholipid in the fluid phase. At concentrations greater than 15 mol% (+)-totarol completely suppressed the gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition in both DMPC and DMPG vesicles. Incorporation of increasing amounts of (+)-totarol into DEPE vesicles induced the appearance of the H(II) hexagonal phase at low temperatures in accordance with NMR data. At (+)-totarol concentrations between 5 and 35 mol% complex thermograms were observed, with new immiscible phases appearing at temperatures below the main transition of DEPE. Steady-state fluorescence anisotropy measurements showed that (+)-totarol decreased and increased the structural order of the phospholipid bilayer below and above the main gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition of DMPC respectively. The changes that (+)-totarol promotes in the physical properties of model membranes, compromising the functional integrity of the cell membrane, could explain its antibacterial effects.  相似文献   

10.
Cationic lipid membranes are known to form compact complexes with DNA and to be effective as gene delivery agents both in vitro and in vivo. Here we employ molecular dynamics simulations for a detailed atomistic study of lipid bilayers consisting of a mixture of cationic dimyristoyltrimethylammonium propane (DMTAP) and zwitterionic dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC). Our main objective is to examine how the composition of the DMPC/DMTAP bilayers affects their structural and electrostatic properties in the liquid-crystalline phase. By varying the mole fraction of DMTAP, we have found that the area per lipid has a pronounced nonmonotonic dependence on the DMTAP concentration, with a minimum around the point of equimolar DMPC/DMTAP mixture. We show that this behavior has an electrostatic origin and is driven by the interplay between positively charged TAP headgroups and the zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine (PC) heads. This interplay leads to considerable reorientation of PC headgroups for an increasing DMTAP concentration, and gives rise to major changes in the electrostatic properties of the lipid bilayer, including a significant increase of total dipole potential across the bilayer and prominent changes in the ordering of water in the vicinity of the membrane. Moreover, chloride counterions are bound mostly to PC nitrogens implying stronger screening of PC heads by Cl ions compared to TAP headgroups. The implications of these findings are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The negatively charged fluorophore 3-[p-(6-phenyl)-1,3,5-hexatrienyl]phenylpropionic acid (PA-DPH) was characterized by comparison with its parent compound DPH, and with cationic trimethylammonium-DPH (TMA-DPH). The molar absorption coefficient of PA-DPH (60,000 cm-1.mol-1) as well as its quantum yield (0.7) and fluorescence lifetime (5 ns) in fluid phase membranes are intermediate between DPH and TMA-DPH. Steady-state fluorescence polarization studies show that PA-DPH detects the phase transition of both neutral and anionic bilayers. In fluid phase membranes the absolute values of PA-DPH polarization are considerably higher than DPH and somewhat lower than TMA-DPH. The results suggest that like TMA-DPH, PA-DPH is anchored to the surface of the membrane by its charge, but that it is probing a region somewhat deeper along the bilayer normal. PA-DPH binds to rat hepatic fatty acid binding protein (hFABP) and bovine serum albumin at PA-DPH/protein molar ratios of 1.5:1 and at least 6:1, respectively. Native oleic acid competes with PA-DPH for binding to both proteins, suggesting that the two ligands compete for similar binding sites. The affinity of PA-DPH for hFABP is similar to that of oleic acid. Thus, PA-DPH should be useful both as an anionic fluorescent membrane probe and a long-chain free fatty acid analogue.  相似文献   

12.
13.
In the mixture of lipids and proteins which comprise pulmonary surfactant, the dominant protein by mass is surfactant protein A (SP-A), a hydrophilic glycoprotein. SP-A forms octadecamers that interact with phospholipid bilayer surfaces in the presence of calcium. Deuterium NMR was used to characterize the perturbation by SP-A, in the presence of 5 mM Ca2+, of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) properties in DPPC/egg-PG (7:3) bilayers. Effects of SP-A were uniformly distributed over the observed DPPC population. SP-A reduced DPPC chain orientational order significantly in the gel phase but only slightly in the liquid-crystalline phase. Quadrupole echo decay times for DPPC chain deuterons were sensitive to SP-A in the liquid-crystalline mixture but not in the gel phase. SP-A reduced quadrupole splittings of DPPC choline β-deuterons but had little effect on choline α-deuteron splittings. The observed effects of SP-A on DPPC/egg-PG bilayer properties differ from those of the hydrophobic surfactant proteins SP-B and SP-C. This is consistent with the expectation that SP-A interacts primarily at bilayer surfaces.  相似文献   

14.
Low ionic strength aqueous dispersion of dimyristoyl phosphatidylglycerol (DMPG) presents a rather peculiar gel-fluid thermal transition behavior. The lipid main phase transition occurs over a large temperature interval (ca. 17 degrees C), along which several calorimetric peaks are observed. Using lipids spin labeled at the acyl chain end, a two-peak electron spin resonance (ESR) spectrum is observed along that temperature transition region (named intermediate phase), at three different microwave frequencies: L-, X- and Q-bands. The intermediate phase ESR spectra are analyzed, and shown to be most likely due to spin labels probing two distinct types of lipid organization in the DMPG bilayer. Based on the ESR spectra parameters, a model for the DMPG intermediate phase is proposed, where rather fluid and hydrated domains, possibly high curvature regions, coexist with patches that are more rigid and hydrophobic.  相似文献   

15.
Zhang X  Keiderling TA 《Biochemistry》2006,45(27):8444-8452
Bovine beta-lactoglobulin (betaLG) provides an excellent model protein system for beta-to-alpha conformational change, but its behavior varies when the change is induced by alcohols, surfactants, or lipid vesicles. Here the interaction and orientation of betaLG in association with various artificial lipid vesicles at neutral and acidic pH have been studied by use of several complementary spectroscopic techniques. Circular dichroism (CD) and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectra demonstrated that betaLG acquires a non-native alpha-helical structure upon binding with anionic lipids, while zwitterionic lipids do not have a significant effect on its conformation. The degree of induced alpha-helix depends on the lipid concentration and is strongly affected by the charge of the protein and lipids as well as the ionic strength of the solution. Near-UV CD and Trp emission spectra revealed that the tertiary structure of lipid-bound betaLG is highly expanded but not completely disrupted. Fluorescence quenching together with a Trp emission blue shift showed that the Trp residues remain largely shielded from the solvent when interacting with DMPG, which would be consistent with at least some portions of betaLG having been inserted into the lipid membrane. The orientations of the alpha-helix and beta-sheet axes in membrane-bound betaLG were found to be parallel and perpendicular, respectively, to the membrane film normal, as determined by use of polarized attenuated total reflection (ATR) FTIR spectra. Our findings reveal that the lipid-induced beta-to-alpha transition in betaLG, accompanied by a substantial disruption in tertiary structure, is mainly driven by strong electrostatic interactions. Once the tightly packed betaLG is disrupted, hydrophobic residues become exposed and available for insertion into the lipid bilayer, where hydrophobic interaction with the lipids may play a role in stabilizing the helical components.  相似文献   

16.
Small-angle neutron scattering of the trans-unsaturated DEPC has been investigated as a function of pressure at 12, 18.6 and 35 degrees C. A pressure-induced structural phase transition from a liquid-crystalline state to a gel state is observed at the temperatures studied. The critical pressure of this transition increases with increasing temperature with a delta P/delta T value of 51 bar/C degrees. The small-angle neutron scattering results indicate that the effect of the trans double bonds in DEPC is to enhance the conformational disorder in the hydrocarbon chains. In DEPC bilayers, a pressure-induced conformational ordering process is observed not only in the liquid-crystalline phase but also in the gel phase, which indicates that conformational disorder exists in the liquid-crystalline phase as well as in the gel phase.  相似文献   

17.
Release of glycosylphosphatidylinositol- (GPI-) anchored ectoenzymes from the membrane by phosphatidylinositol- (PI-) specific phospholipases may play an important role in modulating the surface expression and function of this group of proteins. To investigate how the properties of the host membrane affect anchor cleavage, porcine lymphocyte ecto-5'-nucleotidase (5'-NTase; EC 3.1.3.5) was purified, reconstituted into lipid bilayer vesicles of various lipids, and cleaved using PI-PLC from Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt-PI-PLC). Bt-PI-PLC activity was highly dependent on the chain length and unsaturation of the constituent phospholipids. Very high rates of cleavage were observed in fluid lipids with a low phase transition temperature (T(m)), in lymphocyte plasma membrane, and in a lipid mixture that formed rafts. Arrhenius plots of the rate of anchor cleavage in various lipids showed a characteristic break at the bilayer T(m), together with a discontinuity close to T(m). The activation energy for GPI anchor cleavage was substantially higher in gel phase bilayers compared to those in the liquid crystalline phase. The addition of cholesterol simultaneously abolished the phase transition and the large difference in cleavage rates observed above and below T(m). Inclusion of GM(1) and GT(1b) (components of lipid rafts) in the bilayer reduced the overall activity, but the pattern of the Arrhenius plots remained unchanged. Both gangliosides had similar effects, suggesting that bilayer surface charge has little influence on PI-PLC activity. Taken together, these results suggest that lipid fluidity and packing are the most important modulators of Bt-PI-PLC activity on GPI anchors.  相似文献   

18.
High-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy were used to study the interaction of a synthetic model hydrophobic peptide, Lys2-Gly-Leu24-Lys2-Ala-amide, and members of the homologous series of n-saturated diacylphosphatidylcholines. In the low range of peptide mole fractions, the DSC thermograms exhibited by the lipid/peptide mixtures are resolvable into two components. One of these components is fairly narrow, highly cooperative, and exhibits properties which are similar to but not identical with those of the pure lipid. In addition, the fractional contribution of this component to the total enthalpy change, the peak transition temperature, and cooperativity decrease with an increase in peptide concentration, more or less independently of acyl chain length. The other component is very broad and predominates in the high range of peptide concentration. These two components have been assigned to the chain-melting phase transitions of populations of bulk lipid and peptide-associated lipid, respectively. Moreover, when the mean hydrophobic thickness of the PC bilayer is less than the peptide hydrophobic length, the peptide-associated lipid melts at higher temperatures than does the bulk lipid and vice versa. In addition, the chain-melting enthalpy of the broad endotherm does not decrease to zero even at high peptide concentrations, suggesting that this peptide reduces but do not abolish the cooperative gel/liquid-crystalline phase transition of the lipids with which it is in contact. Our DSC results indicate that the width of the phase transition observed at high peptide concentration is inversely but discontinuously related to hydrocarbon chain length and that gel phase immiscibility occurs when the hydrophobic thickness of the bilayer greatly exceeds the hydrophobic length of the peptide. The FTIR spectroscopic data indicate that the peptide forms a very stable alpha-helix under all of our experimental conditions but that small distortions of its alpha-helical conformation are induced in response to any mismatch between peptide hydrophobic length and bilayer hydrophobic thickness. These results also indicate that the peptide alters the conformational disposition of the acyl chains in contact with it and that the resultant conformational changes in the lipid hydrocarbon chains tend to minimize the extent of mismatch of peptide hydrophobic length and bilayer hydrophobic thickness.  相似文献   

19.
Reaction-center proteins of Rhodopseudomonas Sphaeroides reconstituted into phosphatidylcholine vesicles shift and broaden the fluid-gel transition of the lipid bilayer. The amount of broadening and temperature shift of the transition depend both on protein concentration and on lipid chain length. In particular, the direction of the transition temperature shift is very sensitive to lipid chain length. Electron micrographs show homogeneous protein distribution on the fluid surface whereas the solid phase contains protein aggregates the type depending on chain length. The results can qualitatively be understood in the framework of a mattress model of lipid/protein interactions in membranes.  相似文献   

20.
Independently from the cell penetrating peptide uptake mechanism (endocytic or not), the interaction of the peptide with the lipid bilayer remains a common issue that needs further investigation. The cell penetrating or antimicrobial properties of exogenous peptides require probably different preliminary interactions with the plasma membrane. Herein, we have employed (31)P NMR, differential scanning calorimetry and CD to study the membrane interaction and perturbation mechanisms of two basic peptides with similar length but distinct charge distribution, penetratin (non-amphipathic) and RL16, a secondary amphipathic peptide. The peptide effects on the thermotropic phase behavior of large multilamellar vesicles of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC), dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol (DMPG) and dipalmitoleoyl phosphatidylethanolamine (DiPoPE) were investigated. We have found that, even though both peptides are cationic, their interaction with zwitterionic versus anionic lipids is markedly distinct. Penetratin greatly affects the temperature, enthalpy and cooperativity of DMPG main phase transition but does not affect those of DMPC while RL16 presents opposite effects. Additionally, it was found that penetratin induces a negative curvature whereas RL16 induces a positive one, since a decrease in the fluid lamellar to inverted hexagonal phase transition temperature of DiPoPE (T(H)) was observed for penetratin and an increase for RL16. Contrary to penetratin, (31)P NMR of samples containing DMPC MLVs and RL16 shows an isotropic signal indicative of the formation of small vesicles, concomitant with a great decrease in sample turbidity both below and at the phase transition temperature. Opposite effects were also observed on DMPG where both peptides provoke strong aggregation and precipitation. Both CPPs adopt helical structures when contacting with anionic lipids, and possess a dual behavior by either presenting their cationic or hydrophobic domains towards the phospholipid face, depending on the lipid nature (anionic vs zwitterionic, respectively). Surprisingly, the increase of electrostatic interactions at the water membrane interface prevents the insertion of RL16 hydrophobic region in the bilayer, but is essential for the interaction of penetratin. Modulation of amphipathic profiles and charge distribution of CPPs can alter the balance of hydrophobic and electrostatic membrane interaction leading to translocation or and membrane permeabilisation. Penetratin has a relative pure CPP behavior whereas RL16 presents mixed CPP/AMP properties. A better understanding of those processes is essential to unveil their cell translocation mechanism.  相似文献   

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