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1.
Alamethicin is a 20-amino-acid peptide that produces a voltage-dependent conductance in membranes. We investigated the state of aggregation of alamethicin in egg phosphatidylcholine and dioleoylphosphatidylcholine membranes by examining the EPR spectra obtained from an active analog of this peptide that is spin-labeled at its C-terminus. The dependence of both the linewidth and signal intensity as a function of peptide concentration exhibit exchange broadening as the peptide concentration is increased; however, the exchange rates are linear with peptide concentration as is expected for the simple diffusion of monomers. In addition, the spin-exchange rates obtained from the linebroadening are consistent with collisional rates that are predicted from free Brownian diffusion. The results provide strong evidence that in the absence of a membrane potential, alamethicin is largely monomeric in these membranes.  相似文献   

2.
Recently we have shown that the free energy for pore formation induced by antimicrobial peptides contains a term representing peptide-peptide interactions mediated by membrane thinning. This many-body effect gives rise to the cooperative concentration dependence of peptide activities. Here we performed oriented circular dichroism and x-ray diffraction experiments to study the lipid dependence of this many-body effect. In particular we studied the correlation between lipid's spontaneous curvature and peptide's threshold concentration for pore formation by adding phosphatidylethanolamine and lysophosphocholine to phosphocholine bilayers. Previously it was argued that this correlation exhibited by magainin and melittin supported the toroidal model for the pores. Here we found similar correlations exhibited by melittin and alamethicin. We found that the main effect of varying the spontaneous curvature of lipid is to change the degree of membrane thinning, which in turn influences the threshold concentration for pore formation. We discuss how to interpret the lipid dependence of membrane thinning.  相似文献   

3.
Chen FY  Lee MT  Huang HW 《Biophysical journal》2003,84(6):3751-3758
Antimicrobial peptides have two binding states in a lipid bilayer, a surface state S and a pore-forming state I. The transition from the S state to the I state has a sigmoidal peptide-concentration dependence indicating cooperativity in the peptide-membrane interactions. In a previous paper, we reported the transition of alamethicin measured in three bilayer conditions. The data were explained by a free energy that took into account the membrane thinning effect induced by the peptides. In this paper, the full implications of the free energy were tested by including another type of peptide, melittin, that forms toroidal pores, instead of barrel-stave pores as in the case of alamethicin. The S-to-I transitions were measured by oriented circular dichroism. The membrane thinning effect was measured by x-ray diffraction. All data were in good agreement with the theory, indicating that the membrane thinning effect is a plausible mechanism for the peptide-induced pore formations.  相似文献   

4.
We present an experimental study of the pore formation processes of small amphipathic peptides in model phosphocholine lipid membranes. We used atomic force microscopy to characterize the spatial organization and structure of alamethicin- and melittin-induced defects in lipid bilayer membranes and the influence of the peptide on local membrane properties. Alamethicin induced holes in gel DPPC membranes were directly visualized at different peptide concentrations. We found that the thermodynamic state of lipids in gel membranes can be influenced by the presence of alamethicin such that nanoscopic domains of fluid lipids form close to the peptide pores, and that the elastic constants of the membrane are altered in their vicinity. Melittin-induced holes were visualized in DPPC and DLPC membranes at room temperature in order to study the influence of the membrane state on the peptide induced hole formation. Also differential scanning calorimetry was used to investigate the effect of alamethicin on the lipid membrane phase behaviour.  相似文献   

5.
Two spin-labeled derivatives of the ion conductive peptide alamethicin were synthesized and used to examine its binding and state of aggregation. One derivative was spin labeled at the C-terminus and the other, a leucine analogue, was spin labeled at the N-terminus. In methanol, both the C and N terminal labeled peptides were monomeric. In aqueous solution, the C-terminal derivative was monomeric at low concentrations, but aggregated at higher concentrations with a critical concentration of 23 microM. In the membrane, the C-terminal label was localized to the membrane-aqueous interface using 13C-NMR, and could assume more than one orientation. The membrane binding of the C-terminal derivative was examined using EPR, and it exhibited a cooperativity seen previously for native alamethicin. However, this cooperativity was not the result of an aggregation of the peptide in the membrane. When the spectra of either the C or N-terminal labeled peptide were examined over a wide range of membrane lipid to peptide ratios, no evidence for aggregation could be found and the peptides remained monomeric under all conditions examined. Because electrical measurements on this peptide provide strong evidence for an ion-conductive aggregate, the ion-conductive form of alamethicin likely represents a minor fraction of the total membrane bound peptide.  相似文献   

6.
We present an experimental study of the pore formation processes of small amphipathic peptides in model phosphocholine lipid membranes. We used atomic force microscopy to characterize the spatial organization and structure of alamethicin- and melittin-induced defects in lipid bilayer membranes and the influence of the peptide on local membrane properties. Alamethicin induced holes in gel DPPC membranes were directly visualized at different peptide concentrations. We found that the thermodynamic state of lipids in gel membranes can be influenced by the presence of alamethicin such that nanoscopic domains of fluid lipids form close to the peptide pores, and that the elastic constants of the membrane are altered in their vicinity. Melittin-induced holes were visualized in DPPC and DLPC membranes at room temperature in order to study the influence of the membrane state on the peptide induced hole formation. Also differential scanning calorimetry was used to investigate the effect of alamethicin on the lipid membrane phase behaviour.  相似文献   

7.
The ion currents induced by alamethicin were investigated in unilamellar vesicles using electron paramagnetic resonance probe techniques. The peptide induced currents were examined as a function of the membrane bound peptide concentration, and as a function of the transmembrane electrical potential. Because of the favorable partitioning of alamethicin to membranes and the large membrane area to aqueous volume in vesicle suspensions, these measurements could be carried out under conditions where all the alamethicin was membrane bound. Over the concentration range examined, the peptide induced conductances increased approximately with the fourth power of the membrane bound peptide concentration, indicating a channel molecularity of four. When the alamethicin induced currents were examined as a function of voltage, they exhibited a superlinear behavior similar to that seen in planar bilayers. Evidence for the voltage-dependent conduction of alamethicin was also observed in the time dependence of vesicle depolarization. These observations indicate that the voltage-dependent behavior of alamethicin can occur in the absence of a voltage-dependent phase partitioning. That is, a voltage-dependent conformational rearrangement for membrane bound alamethicin leads to a voltage-dependent activity.  相似文献   

8.
Lipid-alamethicin interactions influence alamethicin orientation   总被引:12,自引:9,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
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9.
Strong aggregation of incorporated alamethicin in the bilayer of lipid vesicles has been observed spectroscopically at aqueous peptide concentrations above a critical value c*. On the other hand, in conventional gating studies with planar lipid films, the onset of conducting pore formation can be characterized by a threshold voltage V.. We present experimental evidence of a direct correspondence between the effects on c* and V. when these parameters are modulated by adding NaCl (to the aqueous medium) or cholesterol (to the lipid moiety). A quantitative analysis supports the idea that the measured aggregation actually results in pore formation, the voltage-dependence being due to an electric field effect on the partition equilibrium of the peptide between the aqueous and the lipid phases.  相似文献   

10.
Alamethicin is a 19-amino-acid residue hydrophobic peptide of the peptaibol family that has been the object of numerous studies for its ability to produce voltage-dependent ion channels in membranes. In this work, for the first time electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy was applied to study the interaction of alamethicin with oriented bicelles. We highlighted the effects of increasing peptide concentrations on both the peptide and the membrane in identical conditions, by adopting a twofold spin labeling approach, placing a nitroxide moiety either on the peptide or on the phospholipids. The employment of bicelles affords additional spectral resolution, thanks to the formation of a macroscopically oriented phase that allows to gain information on alamethicin orientation and dynamics. Moreover, the high viscosity of the bicellar solution permits the investigation of the peptide aggregation properties at physiological temperature. We observed that, at 35 °C, alamethicin adopts a transmembrane orientation with the peptide axis forming an average angle of 25° with respect to the bilayer normal. Moreover, alamethicin maintains its dynamics and helical tilt constant at all concentrations studied. On the other hand, by increasing the peptide concentration, the bilayer experiences an exponential decrease of the order parameter, but does not undergo micellization, even at the highest peptide to lipid ratio studied (1:20). Finally, the aggregation of the peptide at physiological temperature shows that the peptide is monomeric at peptide to lipid ratios lower than 1:50, then it aggregates with a rather broad distribution in the number of peptides (from 6 to 8) per oligomer.  相似文献   

11.
Alamethicin incorporation in lipid bilayers: a thermodynamic study   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
V Rizzo  S Stankowski  G Schwarz 《Biochemistry》1987,26(10):2751-2759
Interaction of the peptide antibiotic alamethicin with phospholipid vesicles has been monitored by changes in its circular dichroic and fluorescent properties. The data are consistent with an incorporation of the peptide in the lipid bilayer. Aggregation of alamethicin in the membrane phase is evident from a characteristic concentration dependence of the incorporation, reflecting the existence of a critical concentration. The data can be fully understood in terms of a theoretical approach that includes aggregation and thermodynamic nonideality. Thermodynamic parameters of the peptide-lipid interaction have been evaluated under a variety of conditions of temperature, ionic strength, and lipid type (saturated and unsaturated fatty acid chains). From the results obtained in this study, one can extrapolate to the incorporation behavior of alamethicin at low concentrations, as they are typical for measurements of conductance across planar lipid films. This leads to a simple explanation of the voltage-gating mechanism of alamethicin in a straightforward way.  相似文献   

12.
Location and dynamics of the voltage-dependent pore-forming icosapeptide alamethicin have been studied using spin labels which were linked directly and via spacers to the C-terminus of the amphiphilic alpha-helix. Ion-transport activities of these derivatives were found to be very similar to those of natural alamethicin in green plant thylakoids chosen as a model system. The shape of the electron spin resonance spectra indicates segmental motion of the nitroxide rather than rotation of the whole peptide. A population of spins showing narrow lines in the presence of thylakoids or lipid vesicles is attributed to alamethicin in the aqueous solution. A second population shows rotational correlation times greater than 10(-9) s and is bound to the membranes, the C-termini residing in an environment with a polarity close to that of water. This population is inaccessible to the hydrophilic, charged line broadening agent chromium oxalate. Since spectral shapes and amplitudes of spectra are unchanged by additions of unlabelled peptide, it is concluded that the ESR detectable spins are bound to peptides essentially in the monomeric state. Alamethicin induced pore formation under flash illumination is demonstrated by measurement of kinetics of proton deposition in the thylakoid interior. When pores are opened by illuminating thylakoids and thus applying a membrane potential, mainly the bound population is affected by a process reversibly suppressing the signal, whereas only limited disappearance of label from the external medium is detected. Apparently, the potential causes a change in the conformation of the peptide which leads to a further immobilisation of the label, possibly due to a deeper insertion of the alpha-helices into the lipid membrane. However, evidence has been presented experimentally that there is no detectable change of potential prior to the opening of the pore.  相似文献   

13.
Molecular mechanism of antimicrobial peptides: the origin of cooperativity   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Based on very extensive studies on four peptides (alamethicin, melittin, magainin and protegrin), we propose a mechanism to explain the cooperativity exhibited by the activities of antimicrobial peptides, namely, a non-linear concentration dependence characterized by a threshold and a rapid rise to saturation as the concentration exceeds the threshold. We first review the structural basis of the mechanism. Experiments showed that peptide binding to lipid bilayers creates two distinct states depending on the bound-peptide to lipid ratio P/L. For P/L below a threshold P/L*, all of the peptide molecules are in the S state that has the following characteristics: (1) there are no pores in the membrane, (2) the axes of helical peptides are oriented parallel to the plane of membrane, and (3) the peptide causes membrane thinning in proportion to P/L. As P/L increases above P/L*, essentially all of the excessive peptide molecules occupy the I state that has the following characteristics: (1) transmembrane pores are detected in the membrane, (2) the axes of helical peptides are perpendicular to the plane of membrane, (3) the membrane thickness remains constant for P/L> or =P/L*. The free energy based on these two states agrees with the data quantitatively. The free energy also explains why lipids of positive curvature (lysoPC) facilitate and lipids of negative curvature (PE) inhibit pore formation.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
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   

16.
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   

17.
N- and C-terminally modified with fullerene or lipopeptide alamethicin molecules were designed for the formation of template-free, self-assembling, voltage-dependent ion conducting channels. The automated solid phase synthesis of the alamethicin-F30 sequence was performed by in situ fluoride activation on 2-chlorotritylchloride-polystyrene resin and the conjugation with fullerenes-C60 and -C70 was carried out in solution. Voltage-dependent bilayer experiments revealed preferred channel sizes for C-terminal alamethicin F30-fullerene-C60 and -C70 conjugates and higher activity compared with native alamethicin, whereas N-terminally linked fullerene balls destabilize pore formation. C-terminal alamethicin F30-fullerene-C70 conjugates show pore states with remarkably long lifetimes of seconds. C-terminal lipopeptide conjugates of alamethicin were prepared by coupling via short peptide spacers with synthetic tripalmitoyl-S-glyceryl-cysteine. which represents the strong membrane anchoring N-terminus of bacterial lipoprotein. Alamethicin-lipopeptide conjugates exhibit high channel forming activities, whereby they self-assemble and adopt preferred pore states with extremely long lifetimes. The novel membrane modifying peptaibol constructs are valuable lead compounds for developments in sensorics related to transmembrane ion conductance.  相似文献   

18.
Leakage from liposomes induced by several peptides is reviewed and a pore model is described. According to this model peptide molecules become incorporated into the vesicle bilayer and aggregate reversibly or irreversibly within the surface. When a peptide aggregate reaches a critical size, peptide translocation can occur and a pore is formed. With the peptide GALA the pores are stable and persist for at least 10 minutes. The model predicts that for a given lipid/peptide ratio, the extent of leakage should decrease as the vesicle diameter decreases, and for a given amount of peptide bound per vesicle less leakage would be observed at higher temperatures due to the increase in reversibility of surface aggregates of the peptide. Effect of membrane composition on pore formation is reviewed. When cholesterol was included in the liposomes the efficiency of inducation of leakage by the peptide GALA was reduced due to reduced binding and increased reversibility of surface aggregation of the peptide. Phospholipids which contain less ordered acyl-chains and have a slightly wedge-like shape, can better accommodate peptide surface aggregates, and consequently insertion and translocation of the peptide may be less favored. Demonstrations of antagonism between pore formation and fusion are presented. The choice of factors which promote vesicle aggregation, e.g., larger peptides, increased vesicle and peptide concentration results in enhanced vesicle fusion at the expense of formation of intravesicular pores. FTIR studies with HIV-1 fusion peptides indicate that in systems where extensive vesicle fusion occurred the beta conformation of the peptides was predominant, whereas the alpha conformation was exhibited in cases where leakage was the main outcome. Antagonism between leakage and fusion was exhibited by 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylglycerol vesicles, where the order of addition of peptide (HIV(arg)) or Ca(2+)dictated whether pore formation or vesicle fusion would occur. The current study emphasizes that the addition of Ca(2+), which promotes vesicle aggregation can also reduce peptide translocation in isolated vesicles.  相似文献   

19.
The efficiencies of membrane pore formation by 14 naturally occurring peptaibols and two structurally modified ampullosporins were compared using an artificial bilayer membrane model. Major differences were found in the dependence on peptide sequences and the constituting amino acids. Alamethicin F-30, chrysospermins C/D, paracelsin and texenomycin A displayed higher activity by several orders of magnitude in comparison with smaller peptaibols containing < 17 amino acids such as ampullosporins, trichofumins. bergofungins and cephaibols. Biological activities such as the induction of pigment formation by the fungus Phoma destructiva and long acting hypothermia and depression of locomotor activity in mice were correlated with moderate membrane permeabilization. No or weak membrane activities corresponded with biological inactivity. Highly membrane-active structures such as alamethicin F-30, chrysospermin C, texenomycin A and paracelsin A displayed antibiotic effects against the fungus and toxicity in mice.  相似文献   

20.
Based on very extensive studies on four peptides (alamethicin, melittin, magainin and protegrin), we propose a mechanism to explain the cooperativity exhibited by the activities of antimicrobial peptides, namely, a non-linear concentration dependence characterized by a threshold and a rapid rise to saturation as the concentration exceeds the threshold. We first review the structural basis of the mechanism. Experiments showed that peptide binding to lipid bilayers creates two distinct states depending on the bound-peptide to lipid ratio P/L. For P/L below a threshold P/L*, all of the peptide molecules are in the S state that has the following characteristics: (1) there are no pores in the membrane, (2) the axes of helical peptides are oriented parallel to the plane of membrane, and (3) the peptide causes membrane thinning in proportion to P/L. As P/L increases above P/L*, essentially all of the excessive peptide molecules occupy the I state that has the following characteristics: (1) transmembrane pores are detected in the membrane, (2) the axes of helical peptides are perpendicular to the plane of membrane, (3) the membrane thickness remains constant for P/L ≥ P/L*. The free energy based on these two states agrees with the data quantitatively. The free energy also explains why lipids of positive curvature (lysoPC) facilitate and lipids of negative curvature (PE) inhibit pore formation.  相似文献   

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