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1.
We studied fusion induced by a 20-amino acid peptide derived from the amino-terminal segment of hemagglutinin of influenza virus A/PR/8/34 [Murata, M., Sugahara, Y., Takahashi, S., & Ohnishi, S. (1987) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 102, 957-962]. To extend the study, we have prepared several water-soluble amphiphilic peptides derived from the HA peptide; the anionic peptides D4, E5, and E5L contain four and five acidic residues and the cationic peptide K5 has five Lys residues in place of the five Glu residues in E5. Fusion of egg phosphatidylcholine large unilamellar vesicles induced by these peptides is assayed by two different fluorescence methods, lipid mixing and internal content mixing. Fusion is rapid in the initial stage (12-15% within 20 s) and remains nearly the same or slightly increasing afterward. The anionic peptides cause fusion at acidic pH lower than 6.0-6.5, and the cationic peptide causes fusion at alkaline pH higher than 9.0. Leakage and vesiculation of vesicles are also measured. These peptides are bound and associated with vesicles as shown by Ficoll discontinuous gradients and by the blue shift of tryptophan fluorescence. They take an alpha-helical structure in the presence of vesicles. They become more hydrophobic in the pH regions for fusion. When the suspension is made acidic or alkaline, the vesicles aggregate, as shown by the increase in light scattering. The fusion mechanism suggests that the amphiphilic peptides become more hydrophobic by neutralization due to protonation of the carboxyl groups or deprotonation of the lysyl amino groups, aggregate the vesicles together, and interact strongly with lipid bilayers to cause fusion. At higher peptide concentrations, E5 and E5L cause fusion transiently at acidic pH followed by vesiculation.  相似文献   

2.
To investigate the effect of lipid structure upon the membrane topography of hydrophobic helices, the behavior of hydrophobic peptides was studied in model membrane vesicles. To define topography, fluorescence and fluorescence quenching methods were used to determine the location of a Trp at the center of the hydrophobic sequence. For peptides with cationic residues flanking the hydrophobic sequence, the stability of the transmembrane (TM) configuration (relative to a membrane-bound non-TM state) increased as a function of lipid composition on the order: 1:1 (mol:mol) 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC):1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine ∼ 6:4 POPC:cholesterol < POPC ∼ dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) < 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-rac-(1-glycerol)] sodium salt (DOPG) ≤ 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-l-serine] sodium salt (DOPS), indicating that the anionic lipids DOPG and DOPS most strongly stabilized the TM configuration. TM stabilization was near maximal at 20-30 mol% anionic lipid, which are physiologically relevant values. TM stabilization by anionic lipid was observed for hydrophobic sequences with a diverse set of sequences (including polyAla), diverse lengths (from 12 to 22 residues), and various cationic flanking residues (H, R, or K), but not when the flanking residues were uncharged. TM stabilization by anionic lipid was also dependent on the number of cationic residues flanking the hydrophobic sequence, but was still significant with only one cationic residue flanking each end of the peptide. These observations are consistent with TM-stabilizing effects being electrostatic in origin. However, Trp located more deeply in DOPS vesicles relative to DOPG vesicles, and peptides in DOPS vesicles showed increased helix formation relative to DOPG and all other lipid compositions. These observations fit a model in which DOPS anchors flanking residues near the membrane surface more strongly than does DOPG and/or increases the stability of the TM state to a greater degree than DOPG. We conclude that anionic lipids can have significant and headgroup structure-specific effects upon membrane protein topography.  相似文献   

3.
Cationic, O-alkylphosphatidylcholines, recently developed as DNA transfection agents, form bilayers indistinguishable from those of natural phospholipids and undergo fusion with anionic bilayers. Membrane merging (lipid mixing), contents release, and contents mixing between populations of positive vesicles containing O-ethylphosphatidylcholine (EDOPC) and negative vesicles containing dioleolylphosphatidylglycerol (DOPG) have been determined with standard fluorometric vesicle-population assays. Surface-charge densities were varied from zero to full charge. All interactions depended critically on surface-charge density, as expected from the adhesion-condensation mechanism. Membrane mixing ranged from zero to 100%, with significant mixing (>10 <70%) occurring between cationic vesicles that were fully charged and anionic vesicles that had fractional surface charges as low as 0.1. Such mixing with membranes as weakly charged as cell membranes should be relevant to transfection with cationic lipids. Unexpectedly, lipid mixing was higher at high than at low ionic strength when one lipid dispersion was prepared from EDOPC plus DOPG (in different proportions), especially when the other vesicles were of EDOPC; this may somehow be a consequence of the ability of the former mixture to assume non-lamellar phases. Leakage of aqueous contents was also a strong function of charge, with fully charged vesicles releasing essentially all of their contents less than 1 min after mixing. EDOPC was more active in this regard than was DOPG, which probably reflects stronger intermolecular interactions of DOPG. Fusion, as measured by contents mixing, exhibited maximal values of 10% at intermediate surface charge. Reduced fusion at higher charge is attributed to multiple vesicle interactions leading to rupture. The existence of previously published data on individual interactions of vesicles of the same composition made it possible for the first time to compare pairwise with population interactions, confirming the likelihood of population studies to overestimate rupture and hemifusion and underestimate true vesicle fusion.  相似文献   

4.
Ortiz A  Cajal Y  Haro I  Reig F  Alsina MA 《Biopolymers》2000,53(6):455-466
The interaction of the multiple antigenic peptide MAP4VP3 with lipid membranes has been studied by spectroscopic techniques. MAP4VP3 is a multimeric peptide that corresponds to four units of the sequence 110-121 of the capsid protein VP3 of hepatitis A virus. In order to evaluate the electrostatic and hydrophobic components on the lipid-peptide interaction, small unilamelar vesicles of different compositions, including zwitterionic dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), anionic dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/phatidylinositol (DPPC:PI 9:1), and cationic dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/stearylamine (DPPC:SA 9.5:0.5), were used as membrane models. Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence changes and energy transfer experiments show that MAP4VP3 binds to all three types of vesicles with the same stoichiometry, indicating that the electrostatic component of the interaction is not important for binding of this anionic peptide. Steady-state polarization experiments with vesicles labeled with 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene or with 1-anilino-8-naphtalene sulphonic acid indicate that MAP4VP3 induces a change in the packing of the bilayers, with a decrease in the fluidity of the lipids and an increase in the temperature of phase transition in all the vesicles. The percentage of lipid exposed to the bulk aqueous phase is around 60% in intact vesicles, and it does not change upon binding of MAP4VP3 to DPPC vesicles, indicating that the peptide does not alter the permeability of the membrane. An increase in the amount of lipid exposed to the aqueous phase in cationic vesicles indicates either lipid flip-flop or disruption of the vesicles. Binding to DPPC vesicles occurs without leakage of entrapped carboxyfluorescein, even at high mol fractions of peptide. However, a time-dependent leakage is seen with cationic DPPC/SA and anionic DPPC/PI vesicles, indicating that the peptide induces membrane destabilization and not lipid flip-flop. Resonance energy transfer experiments show that MAP4VP3 leakage from cationic vesicles is due to membrane fusion, whereas leakage from anionic vesicles is not accompanied by lipid mixing. Results show that MAP4VP3 interacts strongly with the lipid components of the membrane, and although binding is not of electrostatic nature, the bound form of the peptide has different activity depending on the membrane net charge; thus, it is membrane disruptive in cationic and anionic vesicles, whereas no destabilizing effect is seen in DPPC vesicles.  相似文献   

5.
We have studied the fusion of small unilamellar vesicles composed of egg PC and of a mixture of egg PC plus egg PA using various basic amphipathic peptides. Fusion was monitored by carboxyfluorescein leakage assay, light scattering, membrane intermixing assay, contents mixing assay and electron microscopy. Ac-(L-Leu-L-Ala-L-Arg-L-Leu)3-NHCH3 (peptide 4(3] and Ac-(L-Leu-L-Ala-L-Lys-L-Leu)3-NHCH3 (peptide 4'3), which have high hydrophobic moments, caused transformation of small unilamellar vesicles into larger and relatively homogeneous ones. Ac-(L-Leu-L-Leu-L-Ala-L-Arg-L-Leu)2-NHCH3 (5(2], which has medium hydrophobic moment, induced weak but appreciable fusion, while Ac-(L-Ala-L-Arg-L-Leu)3-NHCH3 (3(3] which has no helical structure did not show any fusion. However, peptides 4(3), 4'3 and 5(2) caused massive leakage of the contents from small unilamellar vesicles. These results indicated that interaction of the peptides with artificial membranes caused extensive perturbation of the lipid bilayer, followed by fusion. The fusogenic capacity of model basic peptides was correlated with the hydrophobic moment of each peptide when the peptides adopted an alpha-helical structure in the presence of acidic liposomes. Peptides 4(3) and 4'3 also showed weak fusogenic ability for neutral liposomes, while 5(2) and 3(3) showed no ability, suggesting that highly amphipathic peptides, such as 4(3), interact weakly but distinctly with neutral liposomes to fuse them.  相似文献   

6.
We have synthesized five amphiphilic anionic peptides derived from E5 peptide [Murata, M., Takahashi, S., Kagiwada, S., Suzuki, A., Ohnishi, S. 1992. Biochemistry 31:1986-1992. E5NN and E5CC are duplications of the N-terminal and the C-terminal halves of E5, respectively, and E5CN is an inversion of the N- and the C-terminal halves. E5P contains a Pro residue in the center of E5 and E8 has 8 Glu residues and 9 Leu residues. We studied fusion of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) large unilamellar vesicles assayed by fluorescent probes. The peptides formed alpha-helical structure with different degrees; E5NN, E5CN, and E8 with high helical content and E5CC and E5P with low helical content. These peptides bound to DOPC vesicles at acidic pH in proportion to the helical content of peptide. The peptides caused leakage of DOPC vesicles which increased with decreasing pH. The leakage was also proportional to the helicity of peptide. Highly helical peptides E5NN, E5CN, and E8 caused hemolysis at acidic pH but not at neutral pH. The fusion activity was also dependent on the helicity of peptides. In fusion induced by an equimolar mixture of E5 analogues and K5 at neutral pH, E8, E5NN, and E5CN were most active but E5CC did not cause fusion. In fusion induced by E5-analogue peptides alone, E5CN was active at acidic pH but not at neutral pH. Other peptides did not cause fusion. Amphiphilic peptides also appear to require other factors to cause fusion.  相似文献   

7.
A synthetic, amphipathic 30-amino acid peptide with the major repeat unit Glu-Ala-Leu-Ala (GALA) was designed to mimic the behavior of the fusogenic sequences of viral fusion proteins. GALA is a water-soluble peptide with an aperiodic conformation at neutral pH and becomes an amphipathic alpha-helix as the pH is lowered to 5.0 where it interacts with bilayers. Fluorescence energy transfer measurements indicated that GALA induced lipid mixing between phosphatidylcholine small unilamellar vesicles but not large unilamellar vesicles. This lipid mixing occurred only at pH 5.0 and not at neutral pH. Concomitant with lipid mixing, the vesicles increased in diameter from 500 to 750 to 1000 A as measured by dynamic light scattering and internal volume determination. GALA induced leakage of small molecules (Mr 450) at pH 5.0 was too rapid to permit detection of contents mixing. However, retention of larger molecules (Mr 4100) under the same conditions suggests that vesicle fusion is occurring. For a 100/1 lipid/peptide ratio all vesicles fused just once, whereas for a 50/1 ratio higher order fusion products formed. A mass action model gives good simulation of the kinetics of increase in fluorescence intensity and yields rate constants of aggregation and fusion. As the lipid to peptide ratio decreases from 100/1 to 50/1 both rate constants of aggregation and fusion increase, indicating that GALA is a genuine inducer of vesicle fusion. The presence of divalent cations which can alter GALAs conformation at pH 7.5 had little effect on its lipid mixing activity. GALA was modified by altering the sequence while keeping the amino acid composition constant or by shortening the sequence. These peptides did not have any lipid mixing activity nor did they induce an increase in vesicle size. Together, these results indicate that fusion of phosphatidylcholine small unilamellar vesicles induced by GALA requires both a peptide length greater than 16 amino acids as well as a defined topology of the hydrophobic residues.  相似文献   

8.
The 13-residue cathelicidins indolicidin and tritrpticin are part of a group of relatively short tryptophan-rich antimicrobial peptides that hold potential as future substitutes for antibiotics. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) has been applied here to study the effect of indolicidin and tritrpticin as well as five tritrpticin analogs on the phase transition behaviour of model membranes made up of zwitterionic dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC, DMPC/cholesterol) and anionic dimyristoylphosphatidyl glycerol (DMPG) phospholipids. Most of the peptides studied significantly modified the phase transition profile, suggesting the importance of hydrophobic forces for the peptide interactions with the lipid bilayers and their insertion into the bilayer. Indolicidin and tritrpticin are both known to be flexible in aqueous solution, but they adopt turn-turn structures when they bind to and insert in a membrane surface. Pro-to-Ala substitutions in tritrpticin, which result in the formation of a stable alpha-helix in this peptide, lead to a substantial increase in the peptide interactions with both zwitterionic and anionic phospholipid vesicles. In contrast, the substitution of the three Trp residues by Tyr or Phe resulted in a significant decrease of the peptide's interaction with anionic vesicles and virtually eliminated binding of these peptides to the zwitterionic vesicles. An increase of the cationic charge of the peptide induced much smaller changes to the peptide interaction with all lipid systems than substitution of particular amino acids or modification of the peptide conformation. The presence of multiple lipid domains with a non-uniform peptide distribution was noticed. Slow equilibration of the lipid-peptide systems due to peptide redistribution was observed in some cases. Generally good agreement between the present DSC data and peptide antimicrobial activity data was obtained.  相似文献   

9.
A Percot  X X Zhu  M Lafleur 《Biopolymers》1999,50(6):647-655
In an effort to develop a polymer/peptide assembly for the immobilization of lipid vesicles, we have made and characterized four water-soluble amphiphilic peptides designed to associate spontaneously and strongly with lipid vesicles without causing significant leakage from anchored vesicles. These peptides have a primary amphiphilic structure with the following sequences: AAAAAAAAAAAAWKKKKKK, AALLLAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAWKKKKKK, and KKAALLLAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAWKKKKKK and its reversed homologue KKKKKKWAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAALLLAAKK. Two of the four peptides have their hydrophobic segments capped at both termini with basic residues to stabilize the transmembrane orientation and to increase the affinity for negatively charged vesicles. We have studied the secondary structure and the membrane affinity of the peptides as well as the effect of the different peptides on the membrane permeability. The influence of the hydrophobic length and the role of lysine residues were clearly established. First, a hydrophobic segment of 24 amino acids, corresponding approximately to the thickness of a lipid bilayer, improves considerably the affinity to zwitterionic lipids compared to the shorter one of 12 amino acids. The shorter peptide has a low membrane affinity since it may not be long enough to adopt a stable conformation. Second, the presence of lysine residues is essential since the binding is dominated by electrostatic interactions, as illustrated by the enhanced binding with anionic lipids. The charges at both ends, however, prevent the peptide from inserting spontaneously in the bilayer since it would involve the translocation of a charged end through the apolar core of the bilayer. The direction of the amino acid sequence of the peptide has no significant influence on its behavior. None of these peptides perturbs membrane permeability even at an incubation lipid to peptide molar ratio of 0.5. Among the four peptides, AALLLAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAWKKKKKK is identified as the most suitable anchor for the immobilization of lipid vesicles.  相似文献   

10.
The 13-residue cathelicidins indolicidin and tritrpticin are part of a group of relatively short tryptophan-rich antimicrobial peptides that hold potential as future substitutes for antibiotics. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) has been applied here to study the effect of indolicidin and tritrpticin as well as five tritrpticin analogs on the phase transition behaviour of model membranes made up of zwitterionic dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC, DMPC/cholesterol) and anionic dimyristoylphosphatidyl glycerol (DMPG) phospholipids. Most of the peptides studied significantly modified the phase transition profile, suggesting the importance of hydrophobic forces for the peptide interactions with the lipid bilayers and their insertion into the bilayer. Indolicidin and tritrpticin are both known to be flexible in aqueous solution, but they adopt turn-turn structures when they bind to and insert in a membrane surface. Pro-to-Ala substitutions in tritrpticin, which result in the formation of a stable α-helix in this peptide, lead to a substantial increase in the peptide interactions with both zwitterionic and anionic phospholipid vesicles. In contrast, the substitution of the three Trp residues by Tyr or Phe resulted in a significant decrease of the peptide's interaction with anionic vesicles and virtually eliminated binding of these peptides to the zwitterionic vesicles. An increase of the cationic charge of the peptide induced much smaller changes to the peptide interaction with all lipid systems than substitution of particular amino acids or modification of the peptide conformation. The presence of multiple lipid domains with a non-uniform peptide distribution was noticed. Slow equilibration of the lipid-peptide systems due to peptide redistribution was observed in some cases. Generally good agreement between the present DSC data and peptide antimicrobial activity data was obtained.  相似文献   

11.
The interaction of an RGD-containing epitope from the hepatitis A virus VP3 capsid protein and its RGA-analogue with lipid membranes was studied by biophysical methods. Two types of model membrane were used: vesicles and monolayers spread at the air/water interface, with a composition that closely resembles the lipid moiety of hepatocyte membranes: PC/SM/PE/PC (40:33:12:15; PC: 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylglycero-sn-3-phosphocholine; SM: sphingomyelin from chicken egg yolk; PE, 1,2-dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylethanolamine; PS: L-alpha-phosphatidyl-L-serine from bovine brain). In addition, zwitterionic PC/SM/PE (47:39:14) and cationic PC/SM/PE/DOTAP (40:33:12:15; DOTAP: 1,2-dioleoyl-3-trimethylammonium-propane) membranes were also prepared in order to dissect the electrostatic and hydrophobic components in the interaction. Changes in tryptophan fluorescence, acrylamide quenching, and resonance energy transfer experiments in the presence of vesicles, as well as the kinetics of insertion in monolayers, indicate that both peptides bind to the three types of membrane at neutral and acidic pH; however, binding is irreversible only at low pH. Membrane-destabilizing and fusogenic activities are triggered by acidification at pH 4-6, characteristic of the endosome. Fluorescence experiments show that VP3-RGD and VP3-RGA induce mixing of lipids and leakage or mixing of aqueous contents in anionic and cationic vesicles at pH 4-6, indicating leaky fusion. Interaction with zwitterionic vesicles (PC/SM/PE) results in leakage without lipid mixing, indicating pore formation. Replacement of aspartic acid in the RGD motif by alanine maintains the membrane-destabilizing properties of the peptide at low pH, but not its antigenicity. Since the RGD tripeptide is related to receptor-mediated cell adhesion and antigenicity, results suggest that receptor binding is not a molecular requirement for fusion. The possible involvement of peptide-induced membrane destabilization in the mechanism of hepatitis A virus infection of hepatocytes by the endosomal route is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Polysialic acid (PSA) is a natural anionic polymer typically occurring on the outer surface of cell membranes. PSA is involved in cell signaling and intermolecular interactions with proteins and peptides. The antimicrobial potential of peptides is usually evaluated in model membranes consisting of lipid bilayers but devoid of either PSA or its analogs. The goal of this work was to investigate the possible effect of PSA on the structure of melittin (Mlt) and latarcins Ltc1K, Ltc2a, and the activity of these peptides with respect to model membranes. These peptides are linear cationic ones derived from the venom of bee (Mlt) and spider (both latarcins). The length of each of the peptides is 26 amino acid residues, and they all have antimicrobial activity. However, they differ with respect to conformational mobility, hydrophobic characteristics, and overall charge. In this work, using circular dichroism spectroscopy, we show that the peptides adopt an α-helical conformation upon interaction with either PSA or phospholipid liposomes formed of either zwitterionic or anionic phospholipids or their mixtures. The extent of helicity depends on the amino acid sequence and properties of the medium. Based on small angle X-ray scattering data and the analysis of the fluorescence spectrum of the Trp residue in Mlt, we conclude that the peptide forms an oligomeric complex consisting of α-helical Mlt and several PSA molecules. Both latarcins, unlike Mlt, the most hydrophobic of the peptides, interact weakly with zwitterionic liposomes. However, they bind anionic liposomes or those composed of anionic/zwitterionic lipid mixtures. Latarcin Ltc1K forms associates on liposomes composed of zwitterionic/anionic lipid mixture. The structure of the peptide associates is either disordered or of β-sheet conformation. In all other cases the studied peptides adopt predominately α-helical conformation. In addition, we demonstrate that PSA inhibits membranolytic activity of Mlt and latarcin Ltc1K. These data suggest that the peptides, due to their high conformational lability, can vary structural and amphiphilic properties in the presence of PSA. As a result, various scenarios of the interaction of the peptides with membranes, whose surface is abundant with anionic polysaccharides, can take place. This can account for difficulties in understanding the structure-functional relationships in interactions of linear cationic peptides with biological membranes.  相似文献   

13.
We have used tryptophan fluorescence spectroscopy to characterize the binding affinities of an Escherichia coli LamB signal peptide family for lipid vesicles. These peptides harbor charged residue substitutions in the hydrophobic core region. Titrations of peptides with vesicles composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-3-phosphoglycerol (65:35 mol%), in conjunction with evaluation of peptide dissociation rates from these vesicles, were used to determine binding parameters quantitatively. We find that under low ionic strength conditions, point mutations introducing negatively charged aspartate residues substantially reduce peptide affinity relative to the wild-type peptide. However, the difference between wild-type and mutant peptide affinities was much lower under approximately physiological ionic strength. In addition, the lipid affinities of model surface-binding and transmembrane peptides were determined. These comparative studies with signal and model peptides permitted semi-quantitative deconvolution of signal peptide binding into electrostatic and hydrophobic components. We find that both interactions contribute significantly to binding, although the theoretically available hydrophobic free energy is largely offset by unfavorable polar-group effects. The implications of these results for understanding the potential roles of the signal sequence in protein translocation are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
We show that cryptdin-4 (Crp4), an antimicrobial peptide found in mice, induces the aggregation and hemi-fusion of charged phospholipid vesicles constructed of the anionic lipid POPG and the zwitterionic lipid POPC. Hemi-fusion is confirmed with positive total lipid-mixing assay results, negative inner monolayer lipid-mixing assay results, and negative results from contents-mixing assays. Aggregation, as quantified by absorbance and dynamic light scattering, is self-limiting, creating finite-sized vesicle assemblies. The rate limiting step in the formation process is the mixing of juxtaposed membrane leaflets, which is regulated by bound peptide concentration as well as vesicle radius (with larger vesicles less prone to hemi-fusion). Bound peptide concentration is readily controlled by total peptide concentration and the fraction of anionic lipid in the vesicles. As little as 1% PEGylated lipid significantly reduces aggregate size by providing a steric barrier for membrane apposition. Finally, as stable hemi-fusion is a rare occurrence, we compare properties of Crp4 to those of many peptides known to induce complete fusion and lend insight into conditions necessary for this unusual type of membrane merger.  相似文献   

15.
We show that cryptdin-4 (Crp4), an antimicrobial peptide found in mice, induces the aggregation and hemi-fusion of charged phospholipid vesicles constructed of the anionic lipid POPG and the zwitterionic lipid POPC. Hemi-fusion is confirmed with positive total lipid-mixing assay results, negative inner monolayer lipid-mixing assay results, and negative results from contents-mixing assays. Aggregation, as quantified by absorbance and dynamic light scattering, is self-limiting, creating finite-sized vesicle assemblies. The rate limiting step in the formation process is the mixing of juxtaposed membrane leaflets, which is regulated by bound peptide concentration as well as vesicle radius (with larger vesicles less prone to hemi-fusion). Bound peptide concentration is readily controlled by total peptide concentration and the fraction of anionic lipid in the vesicles. As little as 1% PEGylated lipid significantly reduces aggregate size by providing a steric barrier for membrane apposition. Finally, as stable hemi-fusion is a rare occurrence, we compare properties of Crp4 to those of many peptides known to induce complete fusion and lend insight into conditions necessary for this unusual type of membrane merger.  相似文献   

16.
M Rafalski  J D Lear  W F DeGrado 《Biochemistry》1990,29(34):7917-7922
Peptides representing the N-terminal 23 residues of the surface protein gp41 of LAV1a and LAVmal strains of the human immunodeficiency virus were synthesized and their interactions with phospholipid vesicles studied. The peptides are surface-active and penetrate lipid monolayers composed of negatively charged but not neutral lipids. Similarly, the peptides induce lipid mixing and solute (6-carboxyfluorescein) leakage of negatively charged, but not neutral, vesicles. Circular dichroism and infrared spectroscopy show that at low peptide:lipid ratios (approximately 1:200), the peptides bind to negatively charged vesicles as alpha-helices. At higher peptide:lipid ratios (1:30), a beta conformation is observed for the LAV1a peptide, accompanied by a large increase in light scattering. The LAVmal peptide showed less beta-structure and induced less light scattering. With neutral vesicles, only the beta conformation and a peptide:lipid ratio-dependent increase in vesicle suspension light scattering were observed for both peptides. We hypothesize that the inserted alpha-helical form causes vesicle membrane disruption whereas the surface-bound beta form induces aggregation.  相似文献   

17.
M Murata  K Nagayama  S Ohnishi 《Biochemistry》1987,26(13):4056-4062
The membrane fusion activity of melittin and its succinylated derivative was studied as a function of pH by the transfer of spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine as well as by internal content mixing and electron microscopy. The protonation process of the carboxyl groups introduced into melittin was studied by 13C NMR spectroscopy using derivative prepared with [1,4(-13)C]succinic anhydride. Melittin causes fusion of sonicated phosphatidylcholine vesicles in a wide range of pH. In marked contrast, melittin with all four amino groups succinylated induces fusion only at acidic pH lower than 5.2, with the maximum at pH 5.1. The fusion reactions are very rapid, reaching a saturation level within 1 min. The fusion efficiency depends on the peptide-to-phospholipid ratio in the reaction mixture. Trypsinized succinylated melittin, which has lost the four positively charged C-terminal residues, causes aggregation of vesicles at acidic pH but cannot induce fusion. The 13C NMR peaks for the carboxyl and carbonyl groups of succinylated melittin shifted to higher field as the pH was lowered. The pKa value of the four carboxyl groups was obtained as 5.19 and 4.83 in the presence and absence of vesicles, respectively. The pKa value in the presence of vesicles agrees quite well with the half-maximal pH for fusion of 5.15, indicating that the fusion activity is triggered by protonation of the carboxyl groups in the hydrophobic segment of the peptide. The higher shift of pKa value in the presence of vesicles can be due to stabilization of the protonated form by entrance into lipid bilayer hydrocarbon layer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Lew S  Caputo GA  London E 《Biochemistry》2003,42(36):10833-10842
We examined the effect of ionizable residues at positions flanking the hydrophobic core of helix-forming polyLeu peptides upon helix-helix interactions within model membrane vesicles composed of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine. The peptides studied were flanked on both the N and C termini either by two Lys (K(2)-flanked peptide), one Lys plus one Asp (DK-flanked peptide), or one Lys plus three Asp (KD(3)-flanked peptide). The fluorescence of a Trp residue positioned at the center of the hydrophobic sequence was used to evaluate peptide behavior. As judged by the concentration dependence of the maximum wavelength of Trp emission, there was significant oligomerization of the KD(3)- and DK-flanked peptides, but not the K(2)-flanked peptide, at neutral pH. At neutral pH mixtures of K(2)- and KD(3)-flanked peptides associated with each other, but mixtures of the K(2)- and DK-flanked peptides did not. Oligomerization by the DK- and KD(3)-flanked peptides decreased under low pH conditions in which the Asp residues were protonated. Additional experiments showed that at neutral pH the KD(3)-flanked peptide showed an increased tendency to oligomerize when as little as 10-15 mol % of an anionic lipid, phosphatidylglycerol, was present. The behavior of the other peptides was not strongly influenced by phosphatidylglycerol. These results can largely be explained by modulation of helix-helix interactions via electrostatic interactions involving the helix-flanking ionizable residues. Such interactions may influence membrane protein folding. The self-association of anionic KD(3)-flanked peptides suggests that additional interactions involving charged residues also can modulate helix-helix association.  相似文献   

19.
Antimicrobial peptides encompass a number of different classes, including those that are rich in a particular amino acid. An important subset are peptides rich in Arg and Trp residues, such as indolicidin and tritrpticin, that have broad and potent antimicrobial activity. The importance of these two amino acids for antimicrobial activity was highlighted through the screening of a complete combinatorial library of hexapeptides. These residues possess some crucial chemical properties that make them suitable components of antimicrobial peptides. Trp has a distinct preference for the interfacial region of lipid bilayers, while Arg residues endow the peptides with cationic charges and hydrogen bonding properties necessary for interaction with the abundant anionic components of bacterial membranes. In combination, these two residues are capable of participating in cation-π interactions, thereby facilitating enhanced peptide-membrane interactions. Trp sidechains are also implicated in peptide and protein folding in aqueous solution, where they contribute by maintaining native and nonnative hydrophobic contacts. This has been observed for the antimicrobial peptide from human lactoferrin, possibly restraining the peptide structure in a suitable conformation to interact with the bacterial membrane. These unique properties make the Arg- and Trp-rich antimicrobial peptides highly active even at very short peptide lengths. Moreover, they lead to structures for membrane-mimetic bound peptides that go far beyond regular α-helices and β-sheet structures. In this review, the structures of a number of different Trp- and Arg-rich antimicrobial peptides are examined and some of the major mechanistic studies are presented.  相似文献   

20.
Antimicrobial peptides encompass a number of different classes, including those that are rich in a particular amino acid. An important subset are peptides rich in Arg and Trp residues, such as indolicidin and tritrpticin, that have broad and potent antimicrobial activity. The importance of these two amino acids for antimicrobial activity was highlighted through the screening of a complete combinatorial library of hexapeptides. These residues possess some crucial chemical properties that make them suitable components of antimicrobial peptides. Trp has a distinct preference for the interfacial region of lipid bilayers, while Arg residues endow the peptides with cationic charges and hydrogen bonding properties necessary for interaction with the abundant anionic components of bacterial membranes. In combination, these two residues are capable of participating in cation-pi interactions, thereby facilitating enhanced peptide-membrane interactions. Trp sidechains are also implicated in peptide and protein folding in aqueous solution, where they contribute by maintaining native and nonnative hydrophobic contacts. This has been observed for the antimicrobial peptide from human lactoferrin, possibly restraining the peptide structure in a suitable conformation to interact with the bacterial membrane. These unique properties make the Arg- and Trp-rich antimicrobial peptides highly active even at very short peptide lengths. Moreover, they lead to structures for membrane-mimetic bound peptides that go far beyond regular alpha-helices and beta-sheet structures. In this review, the structures of a number of different Trp- and Arg-rich antimicrobial peptides are examined and some of the major mechanistic studies are presented.  相似文献   

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