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1.
All known naturally occurring linear cationic peptides adopt an amphipathic alpha-helical conformation upon binding to lipids as an initial step in the induction of cell leakage. We designed an 18-residue peptide, (KIGAKI)3-NH2, that has no amphipathic character as an alpha-helix but can form a highly amphipathic beta-sheet. When bound to lipids, (KIGAKI)3-NH2 did indeed form a beta-sheet structure as evidenced by Fourier transform infrared and circular dichroism spectroscopy. The antimicrobial activity of this peptide was compared with that of (KIAGKIA)3-NH2, and it was better than that of GMASKAGAIAGKIAKVALKAL-NH2 (PGLa) and (KLAGLAK)3-NH2, all of which form amphipathic alpha-helices when bound to membranes. (KIGAKI)3-NH2 was much less effective at inducing leakage in lipid vesicles composed of mixtures of the acidic lipid, phosphatidylglycerol, and the neutral lipid, phosphatidylcholine, as compared with the other peptides. However, when phosphatidylethanolamine replaced phosphatidylcholine, the lytic potency of PGLa and the alpha-helical model peptides was reduced, whereas that of (KIGAKI)3-NH2 was improved. Fluorescence experiments using analogs containing a single tryptophan residue showed significant differences between (KIGAKI)3-NH2 and the alpha-helical peptides in their interactions with lipid vesicles. Because the data suggest enhanced selectivity between bacterial and mammalian lipids, linear amphipathic beta-sheet peptides such as (KIGAKI)3-NH2 warrant further investigation as potential antimicrobial agents.  相似文献   

2.
Avrahami D  Oren Z  Shai Y 《Biochemistry》2001,40(42):12591-12603
The initial stages leading to the binding and functioning of membrane-active polypeptides including hormones, signal sequences, and lytic peptides are mainly governed by electrostatic attraction and hydrophobic partitioning between water and lipid bilayers. Antimicrobial peptides serve as an important model for studying the details of these initial steps. However, a systematic analysis of the contribution of multiple hydrophobic amino acids to these steps have been hindered by the propensity of many peptides to aggregate and become inactivated in solution. To this end, we synthesized a series of model amphipathic all L-amino acid peptides and their diastereomers with the sequence KX(3)KWX(2)KX(2)K, where X = Gly, Ala, Val, Ile, or Leu. The effect of the aliphatic amino acids on the biological activity, binding, structure, membrane localization, and mode of action of these peptides was investigated. Most of the L-amino acid peptides oligomerized and adopted distinct structures in solution and in a membrane mimetic environment. Among this group only the Leu containing peptide was hemolytic and highly active on most bacteria tested. The Val- and Leu-containing peptides were hemolytic but inactive toward most bacteria tested. In contrast, the diastereomeric peptides were monomeric and unstructured in solution, but they adopted distinct structures upon membrane binding. While hemolytic activity was drastically reduced, the spectrum of antibacterial activity was preserved or increased. Importantly, we found a direct correlation with the diastereomers between hydrophobicity and propensity to form a helical/distorted-helix and activity (induced membrane leakage and antibacterial activity), despite the fact that they contained 30% D-amino acids. Furthermore, efficient increase in membrane permeability can proceed through different mechanisms. Specifically, the Leu-containing diastereomeric peptide micellized vesicles and possibly bacterial membranes while the Ile-containing diastereomeric peptide fused model membranes and irregularly disrupted bacterial membranes.  相似文献   

3.
Papo N  Shai Y 《Biochemistry》2004,43(21):6393-6403
The amphipathic alpha-helix is a common motif found in many cell lytic peptides including antimicrobial peptides. We have recently shown that significantly altering the amphipathic structure of a lytic peptide by reshuffling its sequence and/or replacing a few l-amino acids with their D-enantiomers did not significantly affect the antimicrobial activity of the peptides nor their ability to bind and permeate negatively charged (PE/PG) membranes. However, a pronounced effect was observed regarding their hemolytic activity and their ability to bind and permeate zwitterionic (PC/Cho) membranes. To shed light on these findings, here we used surface plasmon resonance (SPR) with mono- and bilayer membranes. We found that the L-amino acid (aa) peptides bound 10-25-fold stronger to PC/Cho bilayers compared with monolayers, whereas the diastereomers bound similarly to both membranes. A two-state reaction model analysis of the data indicated that this difference is due to the insertion of the L-aa peptides into the PC/Cho bilayers, whereas the diastereomers are surface-localized. In contrast, only an approximately 2-fold difference was found with negatively charged membranes. Changes in the amphipathicity markedly affected only the insertion of the L-aa peptides into PC/Cho bilayers. Furthermore, whereas the all-L-aa peptides bound similarly to the PC/Cho and PE/PG membranes, the diastereomers bound approximately 100-fold better to PE/PG compared with PC/Cho membranes, and selectivity was determined only in the first binding step. The effect of the peptides on the lipid order determined by using ATR-FTIR studies supported these findings. Besides shedding light on the mode of action of these peptides, the present study demonstrates SPR as a powerful tool to differentiate between non-cell-selective compared with bacteria-selective peptides, based on differences in their membrane binding behavior.  相似文献   

4.
Development of antimicrobial peptides has attracted considerable attention in recent years due to the excessive use of antibiotics, which has led to multiresistant bacteria. Cationic amphiphilic Aib-containing peptide models Ac-(Aib-Arg-Aib-Leu)(n)-NH2, n = 1-4, and sequential cationic polypeptides (Arg-X-Gly)(n), X = Ala, Val, Leu, were prepared and studied for their antimicrobial and hemolytic activity, as well as for their proteolytic stability. Ac-(Aib-Arg-Aib-Leu)(n)-NH2, n = 2, 3 and the polypeptide (Arg-Leu-Gly)(n) exhibited significant antimicrobial activity, and they were nontoxic at their MIC values and resistant, in particular the Aib-peptide models, to enzymatic degradation. The conformational characteristics of the peptide models were studied by circular dichroism (CD). Structure-activity relationship studies revealed the importance of the amphipathic alpha-helical conformation of the reported peptides in inducing antimicrobial effects. It is concluded that peptide models comprising cationic amino acids (Arg), helicogenic and noncoding residues (Aib) and/or hydrophobic and helix-promoting components (Leu) may lead to the development of antimicrobial therapeutics.  相似文献   

5.
The interaction of many lytic cationic antimicrobial peptides with their target cells involves electrostatic interactions, hydrophobic effects, and the formation of amphipathic secondary structures, such as alpha helices or beta sheets. We have shown in previous studies that incorporating approximately 30%d-amino acids into a short alpha helical lytic peptide composed of leucine and lysine preserved the antimicrobial activity of the parent peptide, while the hemolytic activity was abolished. However, the mechanisms underlying the unique structural features induced by incorporating d-amino acids that enable short diastereomeric antimicrobial peptides to preserve membrane binding and lytic capabilities remain unknown. In this study, we analyze in detail the structures of a model amphipathic alpha helical cytolytic peptide KLLLKWLL KLLK-NH2 and its diastereomeric analog and their interactions with zwitterionic and negatively charged membranes. Calculations based on high-resolution NMR experiments in dodecylphosphocholine (DPCho) and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles yield three-dimensional structures of both peptides. Structural analysis reveals that the peptides have an amphipathic organization within both membranes. Specifically, the alpha helical structure of the L-type peptide causes orientation of the hydrophobic and polar amino acids onto separate surfaces, allowing interactions with both the hydrophobic core of the membrane and the polar head group region. Significantly, despite the absence of helical structures, the diastereomer peptide analog exhibits similar segregation between the polar and hydrophobic surfaces. Further insight into the membrane-binding properties of the peptides and their depth of penetration into the lipid bilayer has been obtained through tryptophan quenching experiments using brominated phospholipids and the recently developed lipid/polydiacetylene (PDA) colorimetric assay. The combined NMR, FTIR, fluorescence, and colorimetric studies shed light on the importance of segregation between the positive charges and the hydrophobic moieties on opposite surfaces within the peptides for facilitating membrane binding and disruption, compared to the formation of alpha helical or beta sheet structures.  相似文献   

6.
We compared the properties of two peptides of identical size and amino acid composition, Ac-(LKKL)(5)-NHEt and Ac-(KL)(10)-NHEt. Both are amphipathic, but only Ac-(LKKL)(5)-NHEt is a potent promoter of negative curvature. CD studies performed in the presence of lipids confirmed that under these conditions Ac-(LKKL)(5)-NHEt forms an alpha-helix, and Ac-(KL)(10)-NHEt adopts a beta structure. We studied their binding affinity by centrifugation and isothermal titration calorimetry techniques. The Ac-(LKKL)(5)-NHEt bound to zwitterionic and anionic liposomes, while Ac-(KL)(10)-NHEt interacted mainly with anionic liposomes. Ac-(LKKL)(5)-NHEt was more lytic than Ac-(KL)(10)-NHEt for zwitterionic palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC) liposomes, and for liposomes composed of lipids extracted from either sheep or human erythrocytes (RBC). Both peptides had similar lytic and lipid mixing activities for liposomes containing anionic lipids. Both peptides were highly hemolytic, with Ac-(LKKL)(5)-NHEt active against sheep RBC and Ac-(KL)(10)-NHEt more active against human RBC. From their respective minimal effective concentrations (MECs) as antimicrobial agents, we judged Ac-(KL)(10)-NHEt to be 2 to 5-fold more potent than Ac-(LKKL)(5)-NHEt in media that contained physiological concentrations of NaCl. Notwithstanding, both peptides had MECs <1 microg/mL for Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa and <4 microg/mL for Staphylococcus aureus and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Although selectivity of antimicrobial peptides for bacterial membranes may result, in part, from the preferential display of anionic residues in these membranes, inability to interact with or bind to zwitterionic phospholipids offers no guarantee that the peptide will lack appreciable cytotoxicity for host cells.  相似文献   

7.
Cecropins are a group of anti-bacterial, cationic peptides that have an amphipathic N-terminal segment, and a largely hydrophobic C-terminal segment and normally form a helix-hinge-helix structure. In this study, the ability of cecropin B (CB) and two analogs to lyse phospholipid bilayers, which have two levels of anionic content, has been examined by dye-leakage measurements over the pH range 2. 0-12.0. The two analogs differ from the natural peptide by having either two amphipathic segments (CB1) or two hydrophobic segments (CB3). All these peptides (except CB3 on low anionic content bilayers where it is not active) have maximal lytic activity on both types of bilayers at high pH. However, the pattern of secondary structure formation on these bilayers by the peptides, as measured by circular dichroism (CD), and the pattern of their ability to bind lipid monolayers, as measured using a biosensor, do not directly correlate with the pattern of their lytic ability. CB and CB1 with low anionic content bilayers have secondary structures as measured by CD with a similar pattern to membrane lysis, but binding is maximal near neutral, not high, pH. CB3 has some secondary structures on low anionic content bilayers at low pH and this becomes maximal over the basic range, but CB3 neither binds to nor lyses with these lipid layers. On high anionic content lipid layers, all peptides show high levels of secondary structures over most of the pH range and maximal binding at neutral pH (except for CB3, which does not bind). All three peptides lyse with high anionic content bilayers, but show no activity at neutral pH and reach maximal activity at very high pH. This work shows that pH is a major factor in the capability of antibacterial peptides to lyse with liposomes and that secondary structure and binding ability may not be the main determinants.  相似文献   

8.
Designed to model ideally amphipathic beta-sheets, the minimalist linear (KL)(m)K peptides (m=4-7) were synthesized and proved to form stable films at the air/water interface, they insert into compressed dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine monolayers and interact with egg phosphatidylcholine vesicles. Whatever the interface or the lateral pressure applied to the films, FT-IR and polarization-modulated IRRAS spectroscopy developed in situ on the films indicated that all the peptides totally fold into intermolecular antiparallel beta-sheets. Calculated spectra of the amide region allowed us to define the orientation of the beta-strands compared to the interface. It is concluded that such beta-sheets remain flat-oriented without deep perturbation of zwitterionic phospholipids. Dansyl labelling at the N-terminus indicates that all the peptides are monomeric at a low concentration in aqueous buffer and bind to lipids with similar Dns burying. The affinities for zwitterionic lecithin mono- and bilayers, quantitatively estimated from buffer to lipid partition constants, monotonically increased with peptide length, indicating that hydrophobicity is a limiting parameter for lipid and membrane affinities. Peptides induced permeability increases on zwitterionic liposomes, they are strongly hemolytic towards human erythrocytes and their activity increases concurrently with length. Taking into account the lipid affinity, a hemolytic efficiency can be defined: at the same amount of peptide bound, this efficiency strongly increases with the peptide length. It is proposed that the first determinant step of membrane disturbance is the invasion of the outer membrane leaflet by these ideally amphipathic beta-sheeted structures lying flat at the interface, like large rafts depending on the number of beta-strands.  相似文献   

9.
Cytolytic lymphocytes are endowed with a pore-forming protein called perforin. Recently, a cytolytic domain was located in the first 34 residues of the perforin N-terminus. It has been proposed that the first 19 residues are composed of a 3-domain structure including a putative amphipathic beta-sheet and that the 19 residues are sufficient for cytolytic activity. This model has now been tested by synthesizing peptides covering different portions of the N-terminus, and testing their ability to lyse lipid vesicles or increase the conductance of lipid bilayers or plasma membranes. It was found that the putative beta-sheet is indispensable for lytic activity and that the first 19 residues of the N-terminus are required for optimal lytic activity but that shorter peptides, containing only 16 residues, can form pores in lipid bilayers and cell membranes. A putative amphipathic alpha-helix from the central portion of perforin, homologous to complement C9, is nonlytic to lipid vesicles, but it can form pores in lipid bilayers. Taken together, these results support the model that the perforin N-terminus is important in initial pore formation and that the putative alpha-helical domain may be involved in subsequent perforin polymerization into large pores.  相似文献   

10.
Magainins and other antimicrobial peptides increase ion flux across the membrane. They may do this by forming some type of pore or by perturbing lipid organization due to peptide lying on the bilayer surface. In order to determine if magainins perturb the lipid sufficiently to permeabilize the bilayer, their effect on the motion of fatty acid and lipid spin labels in phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylglycerol (PC/PG) lipid vesicles was determined. Their effect was compared to two synthetic peptides, 18L and Ac-18A-NH(2), designed to mimic the naturally occurring classes of lytic (class L) and apolipoprotein (class A) amphipathic helices, respectively. We show that although magainins and 18L both had significant effects on lipid chain order, much greater than Ac-18A-NH(2), there was no correlation between these effects and the relative ability of these three peptide classes to permeabilize PC/PG vesicles in the order magainins=Ac-18A-NH(2) > 18L. This suggests that the perturbing effects of magainins on lipid chain order at permeabilizing concentrations are not directly responsible for the increased leakage of vesicle contents. The greater ability of the magainins to permeabilize PC/PG vesicles relative to 18L is thus more likely due to formation of some type of pore by magainins. The greater ability of Ac-18A-NH(2) relative to 18L to permeabilize PC/PG vesicles despite its lack of disordering effect must be due to its ability to cause membrane fragmentation. Effects of these peptides on other lipids indicated that the mechanism by which they permeabilize lipid bilayers depends both on the peptide and on the lipid composition of the vesicles.  相似文献   

11.
Two simple lipid A analogues methyl 2,3-di-O-tetradecanoyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside (GL1) and methyl 2,3-di-O-tetradecanoyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside 4-O-phosphate (GL2) were synthesized and used for preparing mixed phosphocholine vesicles as models of the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria. The interaction of these model membranes with magainin 2, a representative of the alpha-helical membrane active peptides, and apidaecin Ib and drosocin, two insect Pro-rich peptides which do not act at the level of the cellular membrane, were studied by CD and dye-releasing experiments. The CD spectra of apidaecin Ib and drosocin in the presence of GL1- or GL2-containing vesicles were consistent with largely unordered structures, whereas, according to the CD spectra, magainin 2 adopted an amphipathic alpha-helical conformation, particularly in the presence of negatively charged bilayers. The ability of the peptides to fold into amphipathic conformations was strictly correlated to their ability to bind and to permeabilize phospholipid as well as glycolipid membranes. Apidaecin Ib and drosocin, which are unable to adopt an amphipathic structure, showed negligible dye-leakage activity even in the presence of GL2-containing vesicles. It is reasonable to suppose that, as for the killing mechanism, the two classes of antimicrobial peptides follow different patterns to cross the bacterial outer membrane.  相似文献   

12.
The amphiphilic alpha-helical peptide (KIAGKIA)3-NH2 (MSI-103) is a designer-made antibiotic, based on the natural sequence of PGLa from Xenopus laevis. Here, we have characterized the concentration-dependent alignment and dynamic behavior of MSI-103 in lipid membranes by solid-state 2H and 19F NMR, using orientational constraints from seven Ala-d3-labeled analogues and five 4-CF3-phenylglycine labels. As previously found for PGLa, MSI-103, too, assumes a flat surface-bound S-state alignment at low peptide concentrations, and it also realigns to a tilted T-state at higher concentrations. For PGLa, the stability of the T-state had been attributed to the specific assembly of antiparallel dimers; hence, it is remarkable that the artificial KIAGKIA repeat sequence can also dimerize in the same way in liquid crystalline lipid bilayers. Oriented circular dichroism analysis shows that for MSI-103 the threshold for realignment from the S-state to the T-state is approximately 3-fold lower than for PGLa (at a peptide-to-lipid ratio of 1:240 in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine, compared to 1:80). Furthermore, MSI-103 becomes laterally immobilized in the lipid bilayer at a concentration ratio of 1:50, which occurs for PGLa only above 1:20. The superior antimicrobial activity of MSI-103 over PGLa thus appears to correlate with its stronger tendency to realign and self-assemble. The hemolytic activities of MSI-103 and its analogues, on the other hand, are shown here to correlate purely with the respective changes in hydrophobicity.  相似文献   

13.
The binding of basic amphipathic fluorescent peptides to lipid bilayers was studied in relation to their antimicrobial activity. Four fluorescent peptides containing pyrenylalanine or tryptophan in an amphipathic basic peptide (4(4] consisting of four repeated units of tetrapeptide, -L-Leu-L-Ala-L-Arg-L-Leu-, were found to have antimicrobial activities against Gram-positive bacteria and to take conformations with fairly high alpha-helical content both in aqueous solutions and liposomes. The fluorescence spectroscopic data suggested that the pyrenylalanine-peptide existed as a monomer in methanol or liposomes but as an oligomer in aqueous solutions to form an excimer between pyrenylalanyl residues. Upon binding with liposomes, the fluorescence spectra of the tryptophan-containing peptide shifted to a shorter wavelength, indicating the change in the state of tryptophan from hydrophilic environment to hydrophobic one. The analytical data for the quenching of tryptophan fluorescence by I- anion suggest that the tryptophan residue in the peptide is not deeply buried in the hydrophobic core of the bilayers. Based on these findings, it is suggested that the peptides may interact with liposomes in such a manner that they lie parallel to the surface of the lipid bilayers with their hydrophobic regions shallowly in the amphipathic moiety of the bilayers.  相似文献   

14.
To investigate the role of peptide-membrane interactions in the biological activity of cyclic cationic peptides, the conformations and interactions of four membrane-active antimicrobial peptides [based on Gramicidin S (GS)] were examined in neutral and negatively charged micelles and phospholipid vesicles, using CD and fluorescence spectroscopy and ultracentrifugation techniques. Moreover, the effects of these peptides on the release of entrapped fluorescent dye from unilamellar vesicles of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine/phosphatidylglycerol (PE/PG) were studied. The cyclic peptides include GS10 [Cyclo(VKLdYP)2], GS12 [Cyclo(VKLKdYPKVKLdYP)], GS14 [Cyclo(VKLKVdYPLKVKLdYP)] and [d-Lys]4GS14 [Cyclo(VKLdKVdYPLKVKLdYP)] (underlined residues are d-amino acids), were different in their ring size, structure and amphipathicity, and covered a broad spectrum of hemolytic and antimicrobial activities. Interaction of the peptides with the zwitterionic PC and negatively charged PE/PG vesicles were distinct from each other. The hydrophobic interaction seems to be the dominant factor in the hemolytic activity of the peptides, as well as their interaction with the PC vesicles. A combination of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions of the peptides induces aggregation and fusion in PE/PG vesicles with different propensities in the order: [d-Lys]4GS14 > GS14 > GS12 > GS10. GS10 and GS14 are apparently located in the deeper levels of the membrane interfaces and closer to the hydrophobic core of the bilayers, whereas GS12 and [d-Lys]4GS14 reside closer to the outer boundary of the interface. Because of differing modes of interaction of the cyclic cationic peptides with lipid bilayers, the mechanism of their biological activity (and its relation to peptide-lipid interaction) proved to be versatile and complex, and dependent on the biophysical properties of both the peptides and membranes.  相似文献   

15.
Unger T  Oren Z  Shai Y 《Biochemistry》2001,40(21):6388-6397
The amphipathic alpha-helical structure is a common motif found in membrane binding polypeptides including cell lytic peptides, antimicrobial peptides, hormones, and signal sequences. Numerous studies have been undertaken to understand the driving forces for partitioning of amphipathic alpha-helical peptides into membranes, many of them based on the antimicrobial peptide magainin 2 and the non-cell-selective cytolytic peptide melittin, as paradigms. These studies emphasized the role of linearity in their mode of action. Here we synthesized and compared the structure, biological function, and interaction with model membranes of linear and cyclic analogues of these peptides. Cyclization altered the binding of melittin and magainin analogues to phospholipid membranes. However, at similar bound peptide:lipid molar ratios, both linear and cyclic analogues preserved their high potency to permeate membranes. Furthermore, the cyclic analogues preserved approximately 75% of the helical structure of the linear peptides when bound to membranes. Biological activity studies revealed that the cyclic melittin analogue had increased antibacterial activity but decreased hemolytic activity, whereas the cyclic magainin 2 analogue had a marked decrease in both antibacterial and hemolytic activities. The results indicate that the linearity of the peptides is not essential for the disruption of the target phospholipid membrane, but rather provides the means to reach it. In addition, interfering with the coil-helix transition by cyclization, while maintaining the same sequence of hydrophobic and positively charged amino acids, allows a separated evaluation of the hydrophobic and electrostatic contributions to binding of peptides to membranes.  相似文献   

16.
Many potent antimicrobial peptides also present hemolytic activity, an undesired collateral effect for the therapeutic application. Unlike other mastoparan peptides, Polybia-MP1 (IDWKKLLDAAKQIL), obtained from the venom of the social wasp Polybia paulista, is highly selective of bacterial cells. The study of its mechanism of action demonstrated that it permeates vesicles at a greater rate of leakage on the anionic over the zwitterionic, impaired by the presence of cholesterol or cardiolipin; its lytic activity is characterized by a threshold peptide to lipid molar ratio that depends on the phospholipid composition of the vesicles. At these particular threshold concentrations, the apparent average pore number is distinctive between anionic and zwitterionic vesicles, suggesting that pores are similarly formed depending on the ionic character of the bilayer. To prospect the molecular reasons for the strengthened selectivity in Polybia-MP1 and its absence in Mastoparan-X, MD simulations were carried out. Both peptides presented amphipathic alpha-helical structures, as previously observed in Circular Dichroism spectra, with important differences in the extension and stability of the helix; their backbone solvation analysis also indicate a different profile, suggesting that the selectivity of Polybia-MP1 is a consequence of the distribution of the charged and polar residues along the peptide helix, and on how the solvent molecules orient themselves according to these electrostatic interactions. We suggest that the lack of hemolytic activity of Polybia-MP1 is due to the presence and position of Asp residues that enable the equilibrium of electrostatic interactions and favor the preference for the more hydrophilic environment.  相似文献   

17.
Isolated from the venom sac of solitary spider wasp, Anoplius samariensis, anoplin is the smallest linear α-helical antimicrobial peptide found naturally with broad spectrum activity against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, and little hemolytic activity toward human erythrocytes. Deamidation was found to decrease the peptide's antibacterial properties. In the present work, interactions of amidated (Ano-NH2) and deamidated (Ano-OH) forms of anoplin as well as Ano-NH2 composed of all D-amino acids (D-Ano-NH2) with model cell membranes were investigated by means of Langmuir Blodgett (LB) technique, atomic force microscopy (AFM), X-ray photoemission electron microscopy (X-PEEM) and carboxyfluorescein leakage assay in order to gain a better understanding of the effect of these peptide modifications on membrane binding and lytic properties. According to LB, all three peptides form stable monolayers at the air/water interface with Ano-NH2 occupying a slightly greater area per molecule than Ano-OH. All three forms of the peptide interact preferentially with anionic 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-rac-(1-glycerol)] (DPPG), rather than zwitterionic 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) lipid monolayer. Peptides form nanoscale clusters in zwitterionic but not in anionic monolayers. Finally, membrane lytic activity of all derivatives was found to depend strongly on membrane composition and lipid/peptide ratio. The results suggest that amidated forms of peptides are likely to possess higher membrane binding affinity due to the increased charge.  相似文献   

18.
The designed antimicrobial peptide KIGAKIKIGAKIKIGAKI possesses enhanced membrane selectivity for bacterial lipids, such as phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylglycerol. The perturbation of the bilayer by the peptide was first monitored using oriented bilayer samples on glass plates. The alignment of POPE/POPG model membranes with respect to the bilayer normal was severely altered at 4 mol% KIGAKI while the alignment of POPC bilayers was retained. The interaction mechanism between the peptide and POPE/POPG bilayers was investigated by carefully comparing three bilayer MLV samples (POPE bilayers, POPG bilayers, and POPE/POPG 4/1 bilayers). KIGAKI induces the formation of an isotropic phase for POPE/POPG bilayers, but only a slight change in the (31)P NMR CSA line shape for both POPE and POPG bilayers, indicating the synergistic roles of POPE and POPG lipids in the disruption of the membrane structure by KIGAKI. (2)H NMR powder spectra show no reduction of the lipid chain order for both POPG and POPE/POPG bilayers upon peptide incorporation, supporting the evidence that the peptide acts as a surface peptide. (31)P longitudinal relaxation studies confirmed that different dynamic changes occurred upon interaction of the peptide with the three different lipid bilayers, indicating that the strong electrostatic interaction between the cationic peptide KIGAKI and anionic POPG lipids is not the only factor in determining the antimicrobial activity. Furthermore, (31)P and (2)H NMR powder spectra demonstrated a change in membrane characteristics upon mixing of POPE and POPG lipids. The interaction between different lipids, such as POPE and POPG, in the mixed bilayers may provide the molecular basis for the KIGAKI carpet mechanism in the permeation of the membrane.  相似文献   

19.
Thennarasu S  Huang R  Lee DK  Yang P  Maloy L  Chen Z  Ramamoorthy A 《Biochemistry》2010,49(50):10595-10605
In a minimalist design approach, a synthetic peptide MSI-367 [(KFAKKFA)(3)-NH(2)] was designed and synthesized with the objective of generating cell-selective nonlytic peptides, which have a significant bearing on cell targeting. The peptide exhibited potent activity against both bacteria and fungi, but no toxicity to human cells at micromolar concentrations. Bacterial versus human cell membrane selectivity of the peptide was determined via membrane permeabilization assays. Circular dichroism investigations revealed the intrinsic helix propensity of the peptide, β-turn structure in aqueous buffer and extended and turn conformations upon binding to lipid vesicles. Differential scanning calorimetry experiments with 1,2-dipalmitoleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylethanolamine bilayers indicated the induction of positive curvature strain and repression of the fluid lamellar to inverted hexagonal phase transition by MSI-367. Results of isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) experiments suggested the possibility of formation of specific lipid-peptide complexes leading to aggregation. (2)H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) of deuterated 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) multilamellar vesicles confirmed the limited effect of the membrane-embedded peptide at the lipid-water interface. (31)P NMR data indicated changes in the lipid headgroup orientation of POPC, 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylglycerol, and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylethanolamine lipid bilayers upon peptide binding. Membrane-embedded and membrane-inserted states of the peptide were observed via sum frequency generation vibrational spectroscopy. Circular dichroism, ITC, and (31)P NMR data for Escherichia coli lipids agree with the hypothesis that strong electrostatic lipid-peptide interactions embrace the peptide at the lipid-water interface and provide the basis for bacterial cell selectivity.  相似文献   

20.
The skins of closely related frog species produce Gly-Leu-rich peptide orthologs that have very similar sequences, hydrophobicities, and amphipathicities but differ markedly in their net charge and membrane-damaging properties. Cationic Gly-Leu-rich peptides are hemolytic and very potent against microorganisms. Peptides with no net charge have only hemolytic activity. We have used ancestral protein reconstruction and peptide analogue design to examine the roles of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions in the biological activity and mode of action of functionally divergent Gly-Leu-rich peptides. The structure and interaction of the peptides with anionic and zwitterionic model membranes were investigated by circular dichroism with 2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine or 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylglycerol vesicles and surface plasmon resonance with immobilized bilayers. The results, combined with antimicrobial assays, the kinetics of bacterial killing, and membrane permeabilization assays, reveal that Gly, Val, Thr, and Ile can all be accommodated in an amphipathic alpha helix when the helix is in a membrane environment. Binding to anionic and zwitterionic membranes fitted to a 2-stage interaction model (adsorption to the membrane followed by membrane insertion). The first step is governed by hydrophobic interactions between the nonpolar surface of the peptide helix and the membranes. The strong binding of Gly-Leu-rich cationic peptides to anionic membranes is due to the second binding step and involves short-range Coulombic interactions that prolong the residence time of the membrane-inserted peptide. The data demonstrate that evolution has positively selected charge-altering nucleotide substitutions to generate an orthologous cationic variant of neutral hemolytic peptides that bind to and permeate bacterial cell membranes.  相似文献   

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