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1.
Ampullosporin A (AmpA), a 15mer peptalbol containing seven Aib residues is able to induce pigmentation on Phoma destructiva and hypothermia in mice, as well as to exhibit a neuroleptic effect. A circular dichroism study of ampullosporin A and its analogues was carried out in organic solvents with different polarities and detergent micelles to determine the relationship between their conformational flexibility and biological activities. The analogues were obtained by modifying the N- and C-termini of ampullosporin A. Furthermore, Gln and Leu were systematically substituted by Ala and Aib residues were replaced by Ala and/or Ac6c. To estimate the helicity of the analogues, the CD spectrum of AmpA recorded in acetonitrile was correlated to its crystal structure. All analogues displayed similar CD curve shapes in organic solvents with the ratio between two negative band intensities R = [theta]n-pi*/[theta]pi-pi* < 1. In acetonitrile, most of the analogues adopted a 70%-85% helical structure, which was higher than the average of 40%-60% obtained in TFE. In detergent micelles, the analogues were distinguishable by their CD profiles. For most of the biologically active analogues, the CD spectra in detergent micelles were characterized by a R ratio > 1 and increased helicity compared with those recorded in TFE, suggesting that the interaction of the peptides with the membrane and peptide association was necessary for their hypothermic effect.  相似文献   

2.
Nuclear-encoded, chloroplast-destined proteins are synthesized with transit sequences that contain all information to get them inside the organelle. Different proteins are imported via a general protein import machinery, but their transit sequences do not share amino acid homology. It has been suggested that interactions between transit sequence and chloroplast envelope membrane lipids give rise to recognizable, structural motifs. In this study a detailed investigation of the structural, dynamical, and topological features of an isolated transit peptide associated with mixed micelles is described. The structure of the preferredoxin transit peptide in these micelles was studied by circular dichroism (CD) and multidimensional NMR techniques. CD experiments indicated that the peptide, which is unstructured in aqueous solution, obtained helical structure in the presence of the micelles. By NMR it is shown that the micelles introduced ill-defined helical structures in the transit peptide. Heteronuclear relaxation experiments showed that the whole peptide backbone is very flexible. The least dynamic segments are two N- and C-terminal helical regions flanking an unstructured proline-rich amino acid stretch. Finally, the insertion of the peptide backbone in the hydrophobic interior of the micelle was investigated by use of hydrophobic spin-labels. The combined data result in a model of the transit peptide structure, backbone dynamics, and insertion upon its interaction with mixed micelles.  相似文献   

3.
The pi-helix is a secondary structure with 4.4 amino acids per helical turn. Although it was proposed in 1952, no experimental support for its existence was obtained until the mid-1980s. While short peptides are unlikely to assume a marginally stable secondary structure spontaneously, they might do so in the presence of appropriate structural constraints. In this paper, we describe a peptide that is designed to assume a pi-helical conformation when stabilized by cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) micelles and Zn(2+). In the designed peptide, lipophilic amino acids are placed such that it would be amphiphilic in the pi-helical, but not in the alpha-helical, conformation. Also, two His residues are incorporated with i, i + 5 spacing, designed to allow binding of Zn(2+) in a pi-helical but not an alpha-helical conformation. The peptide was found to form moderately stable monolayers at the air-water interface, with a collapse pressure that almost doubled when there was Zn(2+) in the subphase. Also, CTAB micelles induced a marked increase in the helicity of the peptide. In 50% TFE, the peptide had a CD spectrum consistent with an alpha-helical structure. The addition of 1 mM Zn(2+) to this solvent caused a saturable decline in ellipticity to approximately half of its original value. The peptide also bound Zn(2+) when it was bound to CTAB micelles, with Zn(2+) again inducing a decrease in ellipticity. The peptide had slightly greater affinity for Zn(2+) in the presence of the CTAB than in a 50% TFE solution (K(d) = 3.1 x 10(-4) M in CTAB and 2.3 x 10(-4) M in TFE). van't Hoff analysis indicated that thermal denaturation of the peptide in 50% TFE containing 1 mM Zn(2+) was associated with both enthalpic and entropic changes that were greater than those in the absence of Zn(2+). These observations are all consistent with the proposal that the peptide assumed a pi-helical conformation in the presence of Zn(2+) and CTAB micelles, and has allowed the stability of this rare conformation to be assessed.  相似文献   

4.
Lazarova T  Brewin KA  Stoeber K  Robinson CR 《Biochemistry》2004,43(40):12945-12954
Human adenosine A(2)a receptor is a member of the G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) superfamily of seven-helix transmembrane (TM) proteins. To test general models for membrane-protein folding and to identify specific features of folding and assembly for this representative member of an important and poorly understood class of proteins, we synthesized peptides corresponding to its seven TM domains. We assessed the ability of the peptides to insert into micelles and vesicles and measured secondary structure for each peptide in aqueous and membrane-mimetic environments. CD spectra indicate that each of the seven TM peptides form thermally stable, independent alpha-helical structures in both micelles and vesicles. The helical content of the peptides depends on the nature of the membrane-mimetic environment. Four of the peptides (TM3, TM4, TM5, and TM7) exhibit very high-helical structure, near the predicted maximum for their TM segments. The TM1 peptide also adopts relatively high alpha-helical structures. In contrast, two of peptides, TM2 and TM6, display low alpha helicity. Similarly, the ability of the peptides to insert into membrane-mimetic environments, assayed by intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence and fluorescence quenching, varied markedly. Most peptides exhibit higher alpha helicity in anionic sodium dodecyl sulfate than in neutral dodecyl-beta-D-maltoside micelles, and TM2 was disordered in zwiterionic DMPC but was alpha-helical in negatively charged DMPC/DMPG vesicles. These findings strongly suggest that electrostatic interactions between lipids and peptides control the insertion of the peptides and may be involved in membrane-protein-folding events. The measured helical content of these TM domains does not correlate with the predicted helicity based on amino acid sequence, pointing out that, while hydrophobic interactions can be a major determinant for folding of TM peptides, other factors, such as electrostatic interactions or helix-helix interactions, may play significant roles for specific TM domains. Our results represent a comprehensive analysis of helical propensities for a human GPCR and support models for membrane-protein folding in which interactions between TM domains are required for proper insertion and folding of some TM helix domains. The tendency of some peptides to self-associate, especially in aqueous environments, underscores the need to prevent improper interactions during folding and refolding of membrane proteins in vivo and in vitro.  相似文献   

5.
Electrostatic interactions play a crucial role in modulating and stabilizing molecular interactions in membranes and membrane-mimetic systems such as micelles. We have monitored the change in the conformation and dynamics of the cationic hemolytic peptide melittin bound to micelles of various charge types, utilizing fluorescence and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. The sole tryptophan of melittin displays a red-edge excitation shift (REES) of 3-6 nm when bound to anionic, nonionic, and zwitterionic micelles. This suggests that melittin is localized in a restricted environment, probably in the interfacial region of the micelles, and this region offers considerable restriction to the reorientational motion of the solvent dipoles around the excited state tryptophan in melittin. Further, the rotational mobility of melittin is considerably reduced in these micelles and is found to be dependent on the surface charge of micelles. Interestingly, our results show that melittin does not partition into cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) micelles owing to electrostatic repulsion between melittin and CTAB micelles, both of which carry a positive charge. In addition, the fluorescence lifetime of melittin is modulated in micelles of different charge types. The lowest mean fluorescence lifetime is observed in the case of melittin bound to anionic sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles. CD spectroscopy shows that micelles induce significant helicity to melittin, with maximum helicity being induced in the case of melittin bound to SDS micelles. Fluorescence quenching measurements using the neutral aqueous quencher acrylamide show differential accessibility of melittin in various types of micelles. Taken together, our results show that micellar surface charge can modulate the conformation and dynamics of melittin. These results could be relevant to understanding the role of the surface charge of membranes in the interaction of membrane-active, amphiphilic peptides with membranes.  相似文献   

6.
S Honda  S Ohashi  H Morii  H Uedaira 《Biopolymers》1991,31(7):869-876
The conformations of synthetic human growth hormone-releasing factor fragment (1-29) in the presence and the absence of 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylglycerol liposome as well as in aqueous 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol solution were investigated by CD spectroscopy. The secondary structure of the peptide in each solution was analyzed by two methods. Both results show that the peptide has an unordered structure in the aqueous solution, whereas it folds into helical structure in the aqueous alcohol and in the phospholipid solution. In addition, although the peptide exists as almost complete helix in the 50 vol% aqueous alcohol (80-90% helicity), it does not reach full helicity even in the solution containing excess amount of phospholipid liposome (maximum 65-70% helicity). The conformational difference is explained by the characteristic amphipathy of the peptide, i.e., the necessity to twist the separated amphipathic helical parts in the interaction with the phospholipid membrane probably makes the helicity of the peptide decrease.  相似文献   

7.
J F Collawn  Y Paterson 《Biopolymers》1990,29(8-9):1289-1296
The conformations of two 17-residue peptide analogues derived from the C-terminal sequence of pigeon cytochrome c (native sequence = KAERADLIAYLKQATAK) were examined in aqueous and lipid environments by CD spectroscopy. The two analogues, KKLLKKLIAYLKQATAK (K peptide) and EELLEELIAYLKQATAK (E peptide), were made amphipathic with respect to helical segregation by substituting a 6-residue sequence at the N-terminus of the native peptide. Their structures were compared to the native peptide under aqueous conditions of varying pH and temperature, and in the presence of liposomes composed of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine in the ratio of 9:1. The results indicated that the native peptide remains unstructured under all the conditions examined even though this region of the native molecule is surface exposed and helical. The E peptide, however, was helical under aqueous conditions at 25 degrees C from pH 2-10 with a maximum helicity at pH 4 (54% helix from analysis of CD data). The ellipticity of the E peptide at pH 4 and 8 was concentration dependent, indicating an aggregation phenomenon. In studies in which the CD spectrum was measured at different temperatures, the E peptide became more helical at lower temperatures at pH 4 but not at pH 8. Upon interaction with a lipid membrane in the form of liposomes, there appeared to be a slight destabilization in the structure of the E peptide. The K peptide in an aqueous environment behaved like the native peptide in that it was structureless at all pHs and temperatures examined. In the presence of liposomes, however, this peptide had a high helical content (75% helix from analysis of CD data). These findings suggest that while stabilization of the helix dipole with negative charges at the N-terminus are important in inducing helical conformation in the E peptide, hydrophobic interactions created during aggregation appear to provide the principal stabilizing force. The results with the K peptide demonstrate that the positive N-terminal sequence of this peptide is able to interact with the negatively charged head groups in the phospholipid membrane in such a fashion as to stabilize a helical structure that is not apparent in an aqueous environment alone.  相似文献   

8.
In order to better understand the driving forces that determine the alignment of amphipathic helical polypeptides with respect to the surface of phospholipid bilayers, lysine-containing peptide sequences were designed, prepared by solid-phase chemical synthesis, and reconstituted into membranes. CD spectroscopy indicates that all peptides exhibit a high degree of helicity in the presence of SDS micelles or POPC small unilamellar vesicles. Proton-decoupled (31)P-NMR solid-state NMR spectroscopy demonstrates that in the presence of peptides liquid crystalline phosphatidylcholine membranes orient well along glass surfaces. The orientational distribution and dynamics of peptides labeled with (15)N at selected sites were investigated by proton-decoupled (15)N solid-state NMR spectroscopy. Polypeptides with a single lysine residue adopt a transmembrane orientation, thereby locating this polar amino acid within the core region of the bilayer. In contrast, peptides with > or = 3 lysines reside along the surface of the membrane. With 2 lysines in the center of an otherwise hydrophobic amino acid sequence the peptides assume a broad orientational distribution. The energy of lysine discharge, hydrophobic, polar, and all other interactions are estimated to quantitatively describe the polypeptide topologies observed. Furthermore, a molecular modeling algorithm based on the hydrophobicities of atoms in a continuous hydrophilic-hydrophobic-hydrophilic potential describes the experimentally observed peptide topologies well.  相似文献   

9.
Glycopeptides containing a tumor-associated carbohydrate antigen (mono-, tri- or hexa-Tn antigen) as a B-cell epitope and a CD4+ T-cell epitope (PV: poliovirus or TT: tetanus toxin) were prepared for immunological studies. Several Tn antigen residues [FmocSer/Thr (alpha-GalNAc)-OH] were successively incorporated into the peptide sequence with unprotected carbohydrate groups. The tri- and hexa-Tn glycopeptides were recognized by MLS128, a Tn-specific monoclonal antibody. The position of the tri-Tn motif in the peptide sequence and the peptide backbone itself do not alter its antigenicity. As demonstrated by both ELISA and FACS analysis, the glycopeptides induced high titers of anti-Tn antibodies in mice, in the absence of a carrier molecule. In addition, the generated antibodies recognized the native Tn antigen on cancer cells. The antibody response obtained with a D-(Tn3)-PV glycopeptide containing three alpha-GalNAc-D-serine residues is similar that obtained with the Tn6-PV glycopeptide. These results demonstrate that short synthetic glycopeptides are able to induce anticancer antibody responses.  相似文献   

10.
Solution structures of a 23 residue glycopeptide II (KIS* RFLLYMKNLLNRIIDDMVEQ, where * denotes the glycan Gal-beta-(1-3)-alpha-GalNAc) and its deglycosylated counterpart I derived from the C-terminal leucine zipper domain of low molecular weight human salivary mucin (MUC7) were studied using CD, NMR spectroscopy and molecular modeling. The peptide I was synthesized using the Fmoc chemistry following the conventional procedure and the glycopeptide II was synthesized incorporating the O-glycosylated building block (Nalpha-Fmoc-Ser-[Ac4-beta-D-Gal-(1,3)-Ac2-alpha-D-GalN3+ ++]-OPfp) at the appropriate position in stepwise assembly of peptide chain. Solution structures of these glycosylated and nonglycosylated peptides were studied in water and in the presence of 50% of an organic cosolvent, trifluoroethanol (TFE) using circular dichroism (CD), and in 50% TFE using two-dimensional proton nuclear magnetic resonance (2D 1H NMR) spectroscopy. CD spectra in aqueous medium indicate that the apopeptide I adapts, mostly, a beta-sheet conformation whereas the glycopeptide II assumes helical structure. This transition in the secondary structure, upon glycosylation, demonstrates that the carbohydrate moiety exerts significant effect on the peptide backbone conformation. However, in 50% TFE both the peptides show pronounced helical structure. Sequential and medium range NOEs, CalphaH chemical shift perturbations, 3JNH:CalphaH couplings and deuterium exchange rates of the amide proton resonances in water containing 50% TFE indicate that the peptide I adapts alpha-helical structure from Ile2-Val21 and the glycopeptide II adapts alpha-helical structure from Ser3-Glu22. The observation of continuous stretch of helix in both the peptides as observed by both NMR and CD spectroscopy strongly suggests that the C-terminal domain of MUC7 with heptad repeats of leucines or methionine residues may be stabilized by dimeric leucine zipper motif. The results reported herein may be invaluable in understanding the aggregation (or dimerization) of MUC7 glycoprotein which would eventually have implications in determining its structure-function relationship.  相似文献   

11.
Riboflavin carrier protein (RCP) plays an important role in transporting vitamin B2 across placental membranes, a process critical for maintenance of pregnancy. Association of the vitamin with the carrier protein ensures optimal bioavailability, facilitating transport. The conformations of three antigenic peptide fragments encompassing residues 4-23 (N21), 170-186 (R18), and 200-219 (Y21) from RCP, which have earlier been studied as potential leads toward a synthetic peptide-based contraceptive vaccine, have been investigated using CD and NMR spectroscopy in aqueous solution and in the presence of the structure-stabilizing cosolvent hexafluoroacetone trihydrate (HFA). In aqueous solution at pH 3.0, all three peptides are largely unstructured, with limited helical population for the peptides R18 and Y21. The percentage of helicity estimated from CD experiments is 10% for both the peptides. A dramatic structural transition from an unstructured state to a helical state is achieved with addition of HFA, as evidenced by intensification of CD bands at 222 nm and 208 nm for Y21 and R18. The structural transition is completed at 50% HFA (v/v) with 40% and 35% helicity for R18 and Y21, respectively. No structural change is evident for the peptide N21, even in the presence of HFA. NMR analysis of the three peptides in 50% HFA confirms a helical conformation of R18 and Y21, as is evident from upfield shifts of CalphaH resonances and the presence of many sequential NH/NH NOEs with many medium-range NOEs. The helical conformation is well established at the center of the sequence, with substantial fraying at the termini for both the peptides. An extended conformation is suggested for the N21 peptide from NMR studies. The helical region of both the peptides (R18, Y21) comprises the core epitopic sequence recognized by the respective monoclonal antibodies. These results shed some light on the issue of structure and folding of antigenic peptides.  相似文献   

12.
Pol peptide, an oligopeptide corresponding to the 27 C-terminal amino acids of DNA polymerase from herpes simplex virus type 1, has recently been suggested to translocate from endosomal compartments into the cytosol after being intracellularly delivered via a protein carrier. While an acidic environment was thought to be important for Pol peptide membrane translocation, the mechanism of translocation remains unclear. To investigate the influence of an acidic environment on the conformational properties of the peptide and on its propensity to interact with lipid bilayers, we characterized the structure of Pol peptide at different pH values by both circular dichroism (CD) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The influence of detergent micelles, which mimic biological lipid membranes, on the peptide secondary structure was also studied. Our CD results indicate that the peptide is in a random conformation in aqueous solution at both acidic and basic pH, whereas in the presence of dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) micelles, it assumes a partial alpha-helical structure which is significantly pH-dependent. An NMR study confirmed that, in the presence of DPC micelles, a short C-terminal alpha-helix is present at pH 6.5, whereas almost two-thirds of the peptide (residues 10-26) fold into an extended amphipathic alpha-helix at pH 4.0. The orientation of Pol peptide relative to the DPC micelle was investigated using paramagnetic probes at both pH 4.0 and 6.5. These studies show that the peptide inserts deeply into the micelle at pH 4.0, whereas it is more exposed to the aqueous environment at pH 6.5. On the basis of these results, a model which might explain the mechanism of translocation of Pol peptide from acidic endosomes to the cytosol is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The stability of a 15-residue peptide has been investigated using CD spectroscopy and molecular simulation techniques. The sequence of the peptide was designed to include key features that are known to stabilize alpha-helices, including ion pairs, helix dipole capping, peptide bond capping, and aromatic interactions. The degree of helicity has been determined experimentally by CD in three solvents (aqueous buffer, methanol, and trifluoroethanol) and at two temperatures. Simulations of the peptide in the aqueous system have been performed over 500 ps at the same two temperatures using a fully explicit solvent model. Consistent with the CD data, the degree of helicity is decreased at the higher temperature. Our analysis of the simulation results has focused on competition between different side-chain/side-chain and side-chain/main-chain interactions, which can, in principle, stabilize the helix. The unfolding in aqueous solution occurs at the amino terminus because the side-chain interactions are insufficient to stabilize both the helix dipole and the peptide hydrogen bonds. Loss of capping of the peptide backbone leads to water insertion within the first peptide hydrogen bond and hence unfolding. In contrast, the carboxy terminus of the alpha-helix is stable in both simulations because the C-terminal lysine residue stabilizes the helix dipole, but at the expense of an ion pair.  相似文献   

14.
Cluster determinant 4 (CD4) is a type I transmembrane glycoprotein of 58 kDa. It consists of an extracellular domain of 370 amino acids, a short transmembrane region, and a cytoplasmic domain of 40 amino acids at the C-terminal end. We investigated the structure of the 62 C-terminal residues of CD4, comprising its transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains. The five cysteine residues of this region have been replaced with serine and histidine residues in the polypeptide CD4mut. Uniformly 15N and 13C labeled protein was recombinantly expressed in E. coli and purified. Functional binding activity of CD4mut to protein VpU of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) was verified. Close to complete NMR resonance assignment of the 1H, 13C, and 15N spins of CD4mut was accomplished. The secondary structure of CD4mut in membrane simulating dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) micelles was characterized based on secondary chemical shift analysis, NOE-based proton-proton distances, and circular dichroism spectroscopy. A stable transmembrane helix and a short amphipathic helix in the cytoplasmic region were identified. The fractional helicity of the cytoplasmic helix appears to be stabilized in the presence of DPC micelles, although the extension of this helix is reduced in comparison to previous studies on synthetic peptides in aqueous solution. The role of the amphipathic helix and its potentially variable length is discussed with respect to the biological functions of CD4.  相似文献   

15.
Equinatoxin II (EqtII) is a protein toxin that lyses both red blood cells and artificial membranes. Lysis is dependent on the lipid composition, with small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs) of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and sphingomyelin (SM) (1:1 molar) being lysed more readily than those of phosphatidylcholine alone. Removing the N-terminus of EqtII prevents pore formation, but does not prevent membrane binding. A peptide corresponding to residues 1–32 of EqtII was found using NMR to adopt a helical structure in micelles. To further understand the structural changes that accompany membrane insertion, synchrotron radiation circular dichroism spectra of the N-terminal peptide in a range of model membranes have been analysed. The peptide structure was examined in water, dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) and DPC:SM (5:1) micelles, and SUVs composed of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) or DMPC, together with SM and cholesterol (Chol). The peptide adopted different conformations in different lipids. Although the presence of SM did not affect the conformation in micelles, inclusion of SM in the bilayer-forming lipid increased the helicity of the peptide. This effect was abolished when Chol was added in DOPC but not in DMPC, which may relate to liquid ordered versus disordered phase properties of the lipid. SM may act as a promoter of membrane organisation necessary for membrane lysis by EqtII.  相似文献   

16.
The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protein U (VpU) is an accessory protein responsible for enhancement of viral particle release and down regulation of the T-lymphocyte coreceptor CD4. Direct binding between the cytoplasmic domains of CD4 and VpU as well as phosphorylation of serines 53 and 57 in the cytoplasmic domain of VpU plays a central role in CD4 downregulation. We investigated structural consequences of phosphorylation of the two serines using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. A uniformly 15N and 13C stable isotope-labeled 45-residue peptide comprising the cytoplasmic domain of VpU (VpUcyt) was recombinantly produced in E .coli. The peptide forms two helices (commonly referred to as helix 2 and 3) in the presence of membrane mimicking dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) micelles, which flank a flexible region containing the two phosphorylation sites. Phosphorylation does not cause any drastic structural changes in the secondary structure of VpUcyt. However, an N-terminal elongation of helix 3 and a slightly reduced helicity at the C-terminus of helix 2 are observed upon phosphorylation based on characteristic changes of 13Calpha and 13Cbeta chemical shifts. Phosphorylation also reduces the local mobility of the protein backbone in the loop region containing the phosphorylation sites according to heteronuclear 1H--15N nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) data.  相似文献   

17.
Bombolitins are five naturally occurring heptadecapeptides acting at the membrane level and able to increase the activity of phospholipase A2. As for other peptides with similar function, the biological activity of bombolitins seems to be mainly due to their ability to form amphipathic helical structures. We synthesized and tested the retro sequence of bom-bolitin I (retro-bombolitin I). This peptide showed an activity similar to that of the natural sequence and was able to adopt a helical structure in the presence of an amphipathic environment consisting of SDS micelles. The secondary structure of this peptide was fully characterized by CD and nmr spectroscopy. © 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
To understand the functional differences between a nontoxic membrane anchor corresponding to the N-terminal sequence of the Escherichia coli enzyme IIA(Glc) and a toxic antimicrobial peptide aurein 1.2 of similar sequence, a series of peptides was designed to bridge the gap between them. An alteration of a single residue of the membrane anchor converted it into an antibacterial peptide. Circular dichroism spectra indicate that all peptides are disordered in water but helical in micelles. Structures of the peptides were determined in membrane-mimetic micelles by solution NMR spectroscopy. The quality of the distance-based structures was improved by including backbone angle restraints derived from a set of chemical shifts ((1)H(alpha), (15)N, (13)C(alpha), and (13)C(beta)) from natural abundance two-dimensional heteronuclear correlated spectroscopy. Different from the membrane anchor, antibacterial peptides possess a broader and longer hydrophobic surface, allowing a deeper penetration into the membrane, as supported by intermolecular nuclear Overhauser effect cross-peaks between the peptide and short chain dioctanoyl phosphatidylglycerol. An attempt was made to correlate the NMR structures of these peptides with their antibacterial activity. The activity of this group of peptides does not correlate exactly with helicity, amphipathicity, charge, the number of charges, the size of the hydrophobic surface, or hydrophobic transfer free energy. However, a correlation is established between the peptide activity and membrane perturbation potential, which is defined by interfacial hydrophobic patches and basic residues in the case of cationic peptides. Indeed, (31)P solid state NMR spectroscopy of lipid bilayers showed that the extent of lipid vesicle disruption by these peptides is proportional to their membrane perturbation potential.  相似文献   

19.
UDP-GalNAc:polypeptide alpha-N-Acetylgalactosaminyltransferases (ppGalNAcTs), a family (EC 2.4.1.41) of enzymes that initiate mucin-type O-glycosylation, are structurally composed of a catalytic domain and a lectin domain. Previous studies have suggested that the lectin domain modulates the glycosylation of glycopeptide substrates and may underlie the strict glycopeptide specificity of some isoforms (ppGalNAcT-7 and -10). Using a set of synthetic peptides and glycopeptides based upon the sequence of the mucin, MUC5AC, we have examined the activity and glycosylation site preference of lectin domain deletion and exchange constructs of the peptide/glycopeptide transferase ppGalNAcT-2 (hT2) and the glycopeptide transferase ppGalNAcT-10 (hT10). We demonstrate that the lectin domain of hT2 directs glycosylation site selection for glycopeptide substrates. Pre-steady-state kinetic measurements show that this effect is attributable to two mechanisms, either lectin domain-aided substrate binding or lectin domain-aided product release following glycosylation. We find that glycosylation of peptide substrates by hT10 requires binding of existing GalNAcs on the substrate to either its catalytic or lectin domain, thereby resulting in its apparent strict glycopeptide specificity. These results highlight the existence of two modes of site selection used by these ppGalNAcTs: local sequence recognition by the catalytic domain and the concerted recognition of distal sites of prior glycosylation together with local sequence binding mediated, respectively, by the lectin and catalytic domains. The latter mode may facilitate the glycosylation of serine or threonine residues, which occur in sequence contexts that would not be efficiently glycosylated by the catalytic domain alone. Local sequence recognition by the catalytic domain differs between hT2 and hT10 in that hT10 requires a pre-existing GalNAc residue while hT2 does not.  相似文献   

20.
DMT1 (divalent metal ion transporter 1) is one member of a family of proton-coupled transporters that facilitate the cellular absorption of divalent metal ions. A pair of mutation-sensitive and highly conserved histidines in the sixth transmembrane domain (TM6) of DMT1 was found to be important for proton-metal ion cotransport. In the present work, we investigate the structures and locations of the peptides from TM6 of DMT1 and its H267A and H272A mutants in SDS micelles by CD and NMR methods. The circular dichroism studies show that the α-helix is a predominant conformation for the wildtype peptide and H267A mutant in SDS micelles, whereas the helicity is evidently decreased for H272A mutant. The pH value has little effect on the α-helical contents of the three peptides. The NMR studies indicate that the wildtype peptide in SDS micelles forms an “α-helix-extended segment-α-helix” structure in which the His267 locates near the central part of the extended segment, while the His272 is involved in the α-helical folding. Both histidines are buried in SDS micelles as evidenced by their pKa values. The structure of the wildtype peptide is evidently changed by the mutations of H267A and H272A. The H267A mutant forms an ordered structure consisting of an α-helix from the C-terminus to the central part and continuous turns in the residual part. The extended structure in the central part of the wildtype peptide is abolished by H267A mutation. The H272A mutation mainly induces unfolding of the short helix in the N-terminal side, while the short helix in the C-terminal side and unordered conformation in the central part remain. All the three peptides are embedded in SDS micelles, and the H267A mutant is inserted more deeply due to increasing hydrophobicity in the central part of the peptide. The specific “α-helix-extended segment-α-helix” structure of TM6 may have an important implication for the binding of the transporter to H+ and metal ions and the conformation change induced by the mutations of two highly conserved histidines may be correlated to the deficiency of the transport activity of DMT1.  相似文献   

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