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1.
The role of the surface polymer brush of nonionic surfactant vesicles (NSV) in inhibiting interactions with small membrane-perturbing molecules was investigated using the bee venom peptide melittin as a probe. The interaction between melittin and NSV was compared with that of distearoylphosphatidylcholine (DSPC) vesicles and sterically stabilised liposomes (SSL) containing 5 mol% pegylated distearoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DSPE.E44). The degree of melittin interaction with the various vesicles was determined by measuring peptide binding and folding, using intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence and circular dichroism respectively, in addition to monitoring the release of encapsulated carboxyfluorescein dye. NSV composed of 1,2-di-O-octadecyl-rac-glyceryl-3-(ω-dodecaethylene glycol) (2C18E12) showed a strong affinity for melittin, whilst exhibiting ~ 50% less bound peptide than SSL. 2C18E12:Chol vesicles showed reduced melittin interaction, in a manner consistent with Chol incorporation into DSPC vesicles. These results are discussed with respect to the effect of Chol on the in-plane order of 2C18E12 bilayers and consequent attenuation of hydrophobic interactions with the peptide. NSV formed from equimolar mixtures of polyoxyethylene-n-stearoyl ethers C18E2 and C18E20 showed a greater interaction with melittin than 2C18E12. However, replacing C18E20 with C18E10 was sufficient to achieve an attenuation of melittin interaction similar to that observed in 2C18E12:Chol vesicles. This indicates that the presence of surface polymer brush alone may confer resistance to melittin, provided hydrophobic interactions between the peptide and the vesicles can be minimised, through improved in-plane bilayer order.  相似文献   

2.
Depth of bilayer penetration and effects on lipid mobility conferred by the membrane-active peptides magainin, melittin, and a hydrophobic helical sequence KKA(LA)7KK (denoted KAL), were investigated by colorimetric and time-resolved fluorescence techniques in biomimetic phospholipid/poly(diacetylene) vesicles. The experiments demonstrated that the extent of bilayer permeation and peptide localization within the membrane was dependent upon the bilayer composition, and that distinct dynamic modifications were induced by each peptide within the head-group environment of the phospholipids. Solvent relaxation, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy and fluorescence quenching analyses, employing probes at different locations within the bilayer, showed that magainin and melittin inserted close to the glycerol residues in bilayers incorporating negatively charged phospholipids, but predominant association at the lipid-water interface occurred in bilayers containing zwitterionic phospholipids. The fluorescence and colorimetric analyses also exposed the different permeation properties and distinct dynamic influence of the peptides: magainin exhibited the most pronounced interfacial attachment onto the vesicles, melittin penetrated more into the bilayers, while the KAL peptide inserted deepest into the hydrophobic core of the lipid assemblies. The solvent relaxation results suggest that decreasing the lipid fluidity might be an important initial factor contributing to the membrane activity of antimicrobial peptides.  相似文献   

3.
We have shown that the molecular conformation of a protein at an interface can be probed spatially using time-resolved evanescent wave-induced fluorescence spectroscopic (TREWIFS) techniques. Specifically, by varying the penetration depth of the evanescent field, variable-angle TREWIFS, coupled with variable-angle evanescent wave-induced time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy measurements, allow us to monitor how fluorescence intensity and fluorescence depolarization vary normal to an interface as a function of time after excitation. We have applied this technique to the study of bovine serum albumin (BSA) complexed noncovalently with the fluorophore 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonic acid. The fluorescence decay varies as a function of the penetration depth of the evanescent wave in a manner that indicates a gradient of hydrophobicity through the adsorbed protein, normal to the interface. Restriction of the fluorescent probes motion also occurs as a function of distance normal to the interface. The results are consistent with a model of partial protein denaturation: at the surface, an adsorbed BSA molecule unfolds, thus optimizing protein–silica interactions and the number of points of attachment to the surface. Further away, normal to the surface, the protein molecule maintains its coiled structure.Submitted as a record of the 2002 Australian Biophysical Society meeting  相似文献   

4.
Interactions between melittin and a variety of negatively-charged lipid bilayers have been investigated by intrinsic fluorescence, fluorescence polarization of 1,6-diphenylhexatriene and differential scanning calorimetry. (1) Intrinsic fluorescence of the single tryptophan residue of melittin shows that binding of this peptide to negatively-charged phospholipids is directly related to the surface charge density, but is unaffected by the physical state of lipids, fluid or gel, single-shell vesicles or unsonicated dispersions. (2) Changes in the thermotropic properties of negatively-charged lipids upon melittin binding allow to differentiate two groups of lipids: (i) A progressive disappearance of the transition, without any shift in temperature, is observed with monoacid C14 lipids such as dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol and -serine (group 1). (ii) With a second group of lipids (group 2), a transition occurs even at melittin saturation, and two transitions are detected at intermediate melittin content, one corresponding to remaining unperturbed lipids, the other shifted downward by 10–20°C. This second group of lipids is constituted by monoacid C16 lipids, dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol and -serine. Phosphatidic acids also enter this classification, but it is the net charge of the phosphate group which allows to discriminate: singly charged phosphatidic acids belong to group 2, whereas totally ionized ones behave like group 1 lipids, whatever the chain length. (3) It is concluded that melittin induces phase separations between unperturbed lipid regions which give a transition at the same temperature as pure lipid, and peptide rich domains in which the stoichiometry is 1 toxin per 8 phospholipids. The properties of such domains depend on the bilayer stability: in the case of C16 aliphatic chains and singly charged polar heads, the lipid-peptide domains have a transition at a lower temperature than the pure lipid. With shorter C14 chains or with two net charges by polar group, the bilayer structure is probably totally disrupted, and the new resulting phase can no longer lead to a cooperative transition.  相似文献   

5.
The structural properties of melittin, a small amphipathic peptide found in the bee venom, are investigated in three different environments by molecular dynamics simulation. Long simulations have been performed for monomeric melittin solvated in water, in methanol, and shorter ones for melittin inserted in a dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine bilayer. The resulting trajectories were analysed in terms of structural properties of the peptide and compared to the available NMR data. While in water and methanol solution melittin is observed to partly unfold, the peptide retains its structure when embedded in a lipid bilayer. The latter simulation shows good agreement with the experimentally derived 3J-coupling constants. Generally, it appears that higher the stability of the helical conformation of melittin, lower is the dielectric permittivity of the environment. In addition, peptide-lipid interactions were investigated showing that the C-terminus of the peptide provides an anchor to the lipid bilayer by forming hydrogen bonds with the lipid head groups.  相似文献   

6.
We have examined the kinetics of the adsorption of melittin, a secondary amphipathic peptide extracted from bee venom, on lipid membranes using three independent and complementary approaches. We probed (i) the change in the polarity of the 19Trp of the peptide upon binding, (ii) the insertion of this residue in the apolar core of the membrane, measuring the 19Trp-fluorescence quenching by bromine atoms attached on lipid acyl chains, and (iii) the folding of the peptide, by circular dichroism (CD). We report a tight coupling of the insertion of the peptide with its folding as an α-helix. For all the investigated membrane systems (cholesterol-containing, phosphoglycerol-containing, and pure phosphocholine bilayers), the decrease in the polarity of 19Trp was found to be significantly faster than the increase in the helical content of melittin. Therefore, from a kinetics point of view, the formation of the α-helix is a consequence of the insertion of melittin. The rate of melittin folding was found to be influenced by the lipid composition of the bilayer and we propose that this was achieved by the modulation of the kinetics of insertion. The study reports a clear example of the coupling existing between protein penetration and folding, an interconnection that must be considered in the general scheme of membrane protein folding.  相似文献   

7.
Select transmembrane proteins found in biogenic membranes are known to facilitate rapid bidirectional flip-flop of lipids between the membrane leaflets, while others have no little or no effect. The particular characteristics which determine the extent to which a protein will facilitate flip-flop are still unknown. To determine if the relative polarity of the transmembrane protein segment influences its capacity for facilitation of flip-flop, we have studied lipid flip-flop dynamics for bilayers containing the peptides WALP23 and melittin. WALP23 is used as a model hydrophobic peptide, while melittin consists of both hydrophobic and hydrophilic residues. Sum-frequency vibrational spectroscopy (SFVS) was used to characterize the bilayers and determine the kinetics of flip-flop for the lipid component, 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DSPC), within the mixed bilayers. The kinetic data were utilized to determine the activation thermodynamics for DSPC flip-flop in the presence of the peptides. Melittin was found to significantly reduce the free energy barrier to DSPC flip-flop when incorporated into the bilayer at 1 mol.%, while incorporation of WALP23 at the same concentration led to a more modest reduction of the free energy barrier. The possible mechanisms by which these peptides facilitate flip-flop are analyzed and discussed in terms of the observed activation thermodynamics.  相似文献   

8.
The rotational mobility of band 3, a protein constituent of the human erythrocyte membrane, was measured by observing the flash-induced transient dichroism of the triplet probe eosin maleimide. In the presence of melittin, a pharmacologically active polypeptide from honey bee (Apis mellifera) venom, a dose-dependent loss of rotational mobility was detected. With acetylated melittin, the ability to immobilise is reduced. Succinylated melittin, however, is devoid of immobilising activity.The possible relevance of these findings to the normal mode of action of melittin was examined by comparing the relative abilities of the native, acetylated and succinylated melittins to lyse erythrocytes and synergise with phospholipase A2, another constituent of bee venom. For both these properties, the order of effectiveness is native melittin > acetyl melittin > succinyl melittin = 0, the same as their order of effectiveness in immobilising band 3.A mechanism is proposed in which melittin is anchored in the membrane by its hydrophobic N-terminus, while its cationic C-terminal moiety binds to negatively charged residues on membrane proteins. This leads either directly or indirectly to protein aggregation and hence loss of mobility. From a detailed comparison of the different effects of the melittin derivatives, it is concluded that melittin may function in vivo by aggregating membrane proteins in order to allow phospholipase A2 to gain access to the membrane bilayer and commence catalysis.  相似文献   

9.
Addition of an amphipathic bee venom peptide, melittin, to sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) vesicles isolated from rabbit skeletal muscles resulted in a fast (<1 min) blue shift in the fluorescence maximum of the melittin--SR membrane complex. Over the following 45 min the position of the fluorescence maximum did not change, but the fluorescence intensity of the melittin--SR membrane complex decreased by approximately 35% with rate constant 0.14 min-1. Melittin rapidly quenched the isotropic signal in the EPR spectrum of spin-labeled stearic acid added to SR membranes. Further changes in the spectral parameters of the spin probe bound to SR membranes in the presence of melittin indicated an increase of the viscosity of the probe microenvironment (empiric parameter T/eta was decreased by approximately 35% with rate constant 0.11 min-1). The surface potential of SR membranes measured using a pH-sensitive dye, neutral red, decreased after melittin addition from -60 to -30 mV. It was demonstrated with the use of a cross-linking agent, cupric o-phenanthroline, that melittin induced slow aggregation of Ca-ATPase protein in SR membranes; the content of enzyme in the monomeric form decreased with rate constant 0.14 min-1. It is concluded that melittin binds rapidly to SR membranes, inducing slow changes in Ca-ATPase conformation and oligomeric state as well as structural transitions in the lipid bilayer of SR membranes.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction of bee venom melittin with erythrocyte membrane ghosts has been investigated by means of fluorescence quenching of membrane tryptophan residues, fluorescence polarization and ESR spectroscopy. It has been revealed that melittin induces the disorders in lipid-protein matrix both in the hydrophobic core of bilayer and at the polar/non-polar interface of melittin complexed with erythrocyte membranes. The peptide has been found to act most efficiently at the concentration of the order of 10(-10) mol/mg membrane protein. The apparent distance separating the membrane tryptophan and bound 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulphonate (ANS) molecules is decreased upon melittin binding, which results in a significant increase of the maximum energy transfer efficiency. Significant changes in the fluorescence anisotropy of both 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene and 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulphonate bound to erythrocyte ghosts, which have been observed in the presence of melittin and crude venom, indicate membrane lipid bilayer rigidization. The effect of crude honey bee venom has been found to be of similar magnitude as the effect of pure melittin at the concentration of 10(-10) mol/mg membrane protein. Using two lipophilic spin labels, methyl 5-doxylpalmitate and 16-doxylstearic acid, we found that melittin at its increasing concentrations induces a well marked rigidization in the deeper regions of lipid bilayer, whereas the effect of rigidization near the membrane surface maximizes at the melittin concentration of 10(-10) mol/mg (10(-4) mol melittin per mole of membrane phospholipid). The decrease in the ratio hw/hs of maleimide and the rise in relative rotational correlation time (tau c) of iodacetamid spin label, indicate that melittin effectively immobilizes membrane proteins in the plane of the lipid bilayer. We conclude that melittin-induced rigidization of the lipid bilayer may induce a reorganization of lipid assemblies as well as the rearrangements in membrane protein pattern and consequently the alterations in lipid-protein interactions. Thus, the interaction of melittin with erythrocyte membranes is supposed to produce local conformational changes in membranes, which are discussed in the connection with their significance during the synergistic action of melittin and phospholipase of bee venom on red blood cells.  相似文献   

11.
The sequence of peptides necessary to inhibit melittin-induced lysis was studied using 13 peptide analogues of the inhibitor Ac-IVIFDC-NH2. Although this inhibitor is a disulfide-linked dimer, inhibition was equally effective if the thiol SH was blocked or replaced by methionine or lysine. The substitution of phenylalanine with other aromatic residues preserved activity, as did the replacement of aspartic acid by asparagine. The results suggest that the cytolytic activity of melittin can be inhibited by a short peptide of four hydrophobic residues followed by two other nonspecific residues. Fluorescence studies showed that the inhibitor caused a blue shift in the Trp emission spectrum. A spin label attached to the N-terminus of the inhibitor significantly quenched the fluorescence. These data confirmed the involvement of Trp 19 with the inhibitor, also predicted by molecular modeling of the probable binding site. Density gradient studies with large unilamellar vesicles indicated that the inhibitor prevented melittin from reacting with the lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

12.
Nine fatty acid–peptide hybrid molecules were constructed using the general formula CH3(CH2) n CO-Phe Asp Cys-amide and tested for their ability to inhibit cell lysis induced by the membrane-active peptide melittin. All of these molecules, where n = 4–14, inhibited the action of melittin to some extent, but the longer carbon chains were most effective. Several potential inhibitors were also constructed with conservative substitutions in the peptide portion of the molecule. All were effective to varying degrees. We concluded that in the hexapeptide inhibitor published by Blondelle et al. (1993), the role of the first three residues is only to provide hydrophobic interaction with the melittin and has no particular amino acid sequence specificity. Some of these inhibitors were found to inhibit the lytic activity of a melittin analogue which had only superficial sequence similarity to melittin and also a truncated form of melittin, indicating the generality of the action of the inhibitors.Deceased 5/4/98  相似文献   

13.
We performed, using an all-atom force field, molecular dynamics computer simulations to study the binding of melittin to the POPC bilayer and its subsequent reorientation in this bilayer. The binding process involves a simultaneous folding and adsorption of the peptide to the bilayer, followed by the creation of a "U shaped" conformation. The reorientation of melittin from the parallel to the perpendicular conformation requires charged residues to cross the hydrophobic core of the bilayer. This is accomplished by a creation of defects in the bilayer that are filled out with water. The defects are caused by peptide charged residues dragging the lipid headgroup atoms along with them, as they reorient. With increased concentration of melittin water defects form stable pores; this makes it easier for the peptide N-terminus to reorient. Our results complement experimental and computational observations of the melittin/lipid bilayer interaction.  相似文献   

14.
J Voss  W Birmachu  D M Hussey  D D Thomas 《Biochemistry》1991,30(30):7498-7506
We have studied the effect of melittin, a basic membrane-binding peptide, on Ca-ATPase activity and on protein and lipid dynamics in skeletal sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), using time-resolved phosphorescence and fluorescence spectroscopy. Melittin completely inhibits Ca-ATPase activity, with half-maximal inhibition at 9 +/- 1 mol of melittin bound to the membrane per mole of ATPase (0.1 mol of melittin per mole of lipid). The time-resolved phosphorescence anisotropy (TPA) decay of the Ca-ATPase labeled with erythrosin isothiocyanate (ERITC) shows that melittin restricts microsecond protein rotational motion. At 25 degrees C in the absence of melittin, the TPA is characterized by three decay components, corresponding to a rapid segmental motion (correlation time phi 1 = 2-3 microseconds), the uniaxial rotation of monomers or dimers (phi 2 = 16-22 microseconds), and the uniaxial rotation of larger oligomers (phi 3 = 90-140 microseconds). The effect of melittin is primarily to decrease the fraction of the more mobile monomer/dimer species (A2) while increasing the fractions of the larger oligomer (A3) and very large aggregates (A infinity). Time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy of the lipid-soluble probe diphenylhexatriene (DPH) shows only a slight increase in the lipid hydrocarbon chain effective order parameter, corresponding to an increase in lipid viscosity that is too small to account for the large decrease in protein mobility or inhibition of Ca-ATPase activity. Thus the inhibitory effect of melittin correlates with its capacity to aggregate the Ca-ATPase and is consistent with previously reported inhibition of this enzyme under conditions that increase protein-protein interactions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The interaction of melittin with multicomponent lipid mixtures composed of phosphatidylcholine, sphingomyelin and phosphatidylserine or phosphatidylglycerol was investigated by measuring the intrinsic fluorescence of the peptide, steady state fluorescence anisotropy of, and Trp-fluorescence energy transfer to fluorescent analogs of the same phospholipids bearing the anthrylvinyl fluorophore in one of the aliphatic chains at various distances from the polar head group. Based on the finding that at high lipid/peptide ratio the peptide induces unequal changes in the fluorescence parameters of phospholipid probes differing structurally only in their polar head groups, it is concluded that melittin induces lipid demixing in its nearest environment. Comparison of the fluorescence energy transfer from Trp to different lipid probes indicates that the depth of penetration of melittin into the bilayer depends on the polar head group composition of the phospholipid matrix and that certain segments of the melittin chain display a specific affinity for a given lipid head group.  相似文献   

16.
In aqueous solution, melittin structure, investigated by CD and 1H-nmr, depends on pH and ionic composition, which also regulate the aggregation state of the peptide. When interacting with phospholipids, however, melittin exhibits a right-handed helical conformation without any evidence of oligomeric association. The overall bilayer structure of phospholipid aqueous dispersions is also maintained in the presence of melittin, although the permeability to aqueous solutes is considerably increased. Small-angle neutron-diffraction analysis of oriented multilayers confirms the existence of a lamellar profile, despite the presence of the peptide throughout each bilayer and exchangeable protons almost reaching the center of the hydrophobic alkyl chains region.  相似文献   

17.
Melittin, an amphiphathic peptide, affects the permeability of vesicles. This can be demonstrated using the dye release technique. Calcein, a fluorescent marker, is trapped in large unilamellar 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) vesicles and melittin-induced leakage of the dye can be monitored directly by increasing fluorescence intensity. First, we characterized the effect of increasing cholesterol content in the membrane on melittin-induced leakage and our results reveal that cholesterol inhibits the lytic activity of the peptide. Using intrinsic fluorescence of the single tryptophan of melittin and 2H-NMR of headgroup deuterated phosphatidylcholine, we demonstrated that the affinity of melittin for phosphatidylcholine vesicles is reduced in the presence of cholesterol; this is associated with the tighter lipid packing of the cholesterol-containing bilayer. This reduced binding is responsible for the reduced melittin-induced leakage from cholesterol-containing membranes. The pathway of release was determined to be an all-or-none mechanism. Finally, we investigated the possibility of achieving specific membrane targeting with melittin, when vesicles of different lipid composition are simultaneously present. Melittin incubated together with vesicles made of pure POPC and POPC containing 30(mol)% cholesterol can empty nearly all the cholesterol-free vesicles while the cholesterol-containing vesicles remain almost intact. Owing to the preferential interaction of melittin with the pure POPC vesicles, we were able to achieve controlled release of encapsulated material from a specific vesicle population. Received: 8 May 1996 / Accepted: 12 September 1996  相似文献   

18.
Understanding the molecular mechanism underlying pore formation in lipid membranes by antimicrobial peptides is of great importance in biological sciences as well as in drug design applications. Melittin has been widely studied as a pore forming peptide, though the molecular mechanism for pore formation is still illusive. We examined the free energy barrier for the creation of a pore in lipid membranes with and without multiple melittin peptides. It was found that six melittin peptides significantly stabilized a pore, though a small barrier (a few kBT) for the formation still existed. With five melittin peptides or fewer, the pore formation barrier was much higher, though the established pore was in a local energy minimum. Although seven melittins effectively reduced the free energy barrier, a single melittin peptide left the pore after a long time MD simulation probably because of the overcrowded environment around the bilayer pore. Thus, it is highly selective for the number of melittin peptides to stabilize the membrane pore, as was also suggested by the line tension evaluations. The free energy cost required to insert a single melittin into the membrane is too high to explain the one-by-one insertion mechanism for pore formation, which also supports the collective melittin mechanism for pore formation.  相似文献   

19.
In previous work, we have shown the utility of the “NMR technique” in locating intercalants within the lipid bilayer. We describe herein the development of a more sensitive and complementary “fluorescence technique” for this purpose and its application to liposomes, bioliposomes and erythrocyte ghosts. This technique is based on the observation in selected compounds of an excellent correlation between the emission wavelength (λem) and Dimroth–Reichardt ET(30) polarity parameter for the solvent in which the fluorescence emission spectrum was obtained.  相似文献   

20.
The structure and dynamics of synthetic melittin (MLT) and MLT analogues bound to monomyristoylphosphatidylcholine micelles, dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles, and diacylphosphatidylcholine films have been investigated by fluorescence, CD, attenuated total reflectance (ATR) FTIR, and 13C NMR spectroscopy. All of these methods provide information about peptide secondary structure and/or about the environment of the single tryptophan side chain in these lipid environments. ATR-FTIR data provide additional information about the orientation of helical peptide segments with respect to the bilayer plane. Steady-state fluorescence anisotropy, fluorescence lifetime, and 13C NMR relaxation data are used in concert to provide quantitative information about the dynamics of a single 13C-labeled tryptophan side chain at position 19 in lipid-bound MLT, and at positions 17, 11, and 9, respectively, in lipid-bound MLT analogues. Peptide chain dynamics are probed by NMR relaxation studies of 13C alpha-labeled glycine incorporated into each of the MLT peptides at position 12. The cumulative structural and dynamic data are consistent with a model wherein the N-terminal alpha-helical segment of these peptides is oriented perpendicular to the bilayer plane. Correlation times for the lysolipid-peptide complexes provide evidence for binding of a single peptide monomer per micelle. A model for the membranolytic action of MLT and MLT-like peptides is proposed.  相似文献   

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