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1.
Protein- and peptide-induced lipid extraction from membranes is a critical process for many biological events, including reverse cholesterol transport and sperm capacitation. In this work, we examine whether such processes could display specificity for some lipid species. Melittin, the main component of dry bee venom, was used as a model amphipathic α-helical peptide. We specifically determined the modulation of melittin-induced lipid extraction from membranes by the change of the methylation level of phospholipid headgroups. Phosphatidylcholine (PC) bilayers were demethylated either by substitution with phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) or chemically by using mono- and dimethylated PE. It is shown that demethylation reduces the association of melittin with membranes, likely because of the resulting tighter chain packing of the phospholipids, which reduces the capacity of the membranes to accommodate inserted melittin. This reduced binding of the peptide is accompanied by an inhibition of the lipid extraction caused by melittin. We demonstrate that melittin selectively extracts PC from PC/PE membranes. This selectivity is proposed to be a consequence of a PE depletion in the surroundings of bound melittin to minimize disruption of the interphospholipid interactions. The resulting PC-enriched vicinity of melittin would be responsible for the observed formation of PC-enriched lipid/peptide particles resulting from the lipid efflux. These findings reveal that modulating the methylation level of phospholipid headgroups is a simple way to control the specificity of lipid extraction from membranes by peptides/proteins and thereby modulate the lipid composition of the membranes.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
The membrane-lytic peptide melittin has previously been shown to form pores in lipid bilayers that have been described in terms of two different structural models. In the "barrel stave" model the bilayer remains more or less flat, with the peptides penetrating across the bilayer hydrocarbon region and aggregating to form a pore, whereas in the "toroidal pore" melittin induces defects in the bilayer such that the bilayer bends sharply inward to form a pore lined by both peptides and lipid headgroups. Here we test these models by measuring both the free energy of melittin transfer (DeltaG degrees ) and melittin-induced leakage as a function of bilayer elastic (material) properties that determine the energetics of bilayer bending, including the area compressibility modulus (K(a)), bilayer bending modulus (k(c)), and monolayer spontaneous curvature (R(o)). The addition of cholesterol to phosphatidylcholine (PC) bilayers, which increases K(a) and k(c), decreases both DeltaG degrees and the melittin-induced vesicle leakage. In contrast, the addition to PC bilayers of molecules with either positive R(o), such as lysoPC, or negative R(o), such as dioleoylglycerol, has little effect on DeltaG degrees , but produces large changes in melittin-induced leakage, from 86% for 8:2 PC/lysoPC to 18% for 8:2 PC/dioleoylglycerol. We observe linear relationships between melittin-induced leakage and both K(a) and 1/R(o)(2). However, in contrast to what would be expected for a barrel stave model, there is no correlation between observed leakage and bilayer hydrocarbon thickness. All of these results demonstrate the importance of bilayer material properties on melittin-induced leakage and indicate that the melittin-induced pores are defects in the bilayer lined in part by lipid molecules.  相似文献   

4.
Poly(ethyleneglycol) (PEG), anchored at the surface of liposomes via the conjugation to a lipid, is commonly used for increasing the liposome stability in the blood stream. In order to gain a better understanding of the protective properties of interfacial polymers, we have studied the binding of melittin to PEG-lipid-containing membranes as well as the melittin-induced efflux of a fluorescent marker from liposomes containing PEG-lipids. We examined the effect of the polymer size by using PEG with molecular weights of 2000 and 5000. In addition, we studied the role of the anchoring lipid by comparing PEG conjugated to phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) which results in a negatively charged PEG-PE, with PEG conjugated to ceramide (Cer) which provides the neutral PEG-Cer. Our results show that interfacial PEG does not prevent melittin adsorption onto the interface. In fact, PEG-PE promotes melittin binding, most likely because of attractive electrostatic interactions with the negative interfacial charge density of the PEG-PE-containing liposomes. However, PEG-lipids limit the lytic potential of melittin. The phenomenon is proposed to be associated with the change in the polymorphic tendencies of the liposome bilayers. The present findings reveal that the protective effect associated with interfacial hydrophilic polymers is not universal. Molecules like melittin can sense surface charges borne by PEG-lipids, and the influence of PEG-lipids on liposomal properties such as the polymorphic propensities may be involved in the so-called protective effect.  相似文献   

5.
Poly(ethyleneglycol) (PEG), anchored at the surface of liposomes via the conjugation to a lipid, is commonly used for increasing the liposome stability in the blood stream. In order to gain a better understanding of the protective properties of interfacial polymers, we have studied the binding of melittin to PEG-lipid-containing membranes as well as the melittin-induced efflux of a fluorescent marker from liposomes containing PEG-lipids. We examined the effect of the polymer size by using PEG with molecular weights of 2000 and 5000. In addition, we studied the role of the anchoring lipid by comparing PEG conjugated to phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) which results in a negatively charged PEG-PE, with PEG conjugated to ceramide (Cer) which provides the neutral PEG-Cer. Our results show that interfacial PEG does not prevent melittin adsorption onto the interface. In fact, PEG-PE promotes melittin binding, most likely because of attractive electrostatic interactions with the negative interfacial charge density of the PEG-PE-containing liposomes. However, PEG-lipids limit the lytic potential of melittin. The phenomenon is proposed to be associated with the change in the polymorphic tendencies of the liposome bilayers. The present findings reveal that the protective effect associated with interfacial hydrophilic polymers is not universal. Molecules like melittin can sense surface charges borne by PEG-lipids, and the influence of PEG-lipids on liposomal properties such as the polymorphic propensities may be involved in the so-called protective effect.  相似文献   

6.
This review details how bilayer structural/elastic properties impact three distinct areas of biological significance. First, the partitioning of melittin into bilayers and melittin-induced bilayer leakage depended strongly on bilayer composition. The incorporation of cholesterol into phosphatidylcholine bilayers decreased melittin-induced leakage from 73 to 3%, and bilayers composed of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), the main lipid on the surface of Gram-negative bacteria, also had low (3%) melittin-induced leakage. Second, transbilayer peptides of different hydrophobic lengths were largely excluded from bilayer microdomains (“rafts”) enriched in sphingomyelin (SM) and cholesterol, even when the length of the transbilayer peptide domain matched the hydrocarbon thickness of the raft bilayer. This is likely due to the large area compressibility modulus of SM:cholesterol bilayers. Third, the major water barrier of skin, the extracellular lamellae of the stratum corneum, was found to contain tightly packed asymmetric lipid bilayers with cholesterol located preferentially on one side of the bilayer and a unique skin ceramide containing an unsaturated acyl chain on the opposite side. We argue that, in each of these three areas, key factors are differences in lipid hydrocarbon chain packing for different lipids, particularly the tight hydrocarbon chain packing caused by cholesterol’s strong interaction with saturated chains.  相似文献   

7.
Papo N  Shai Y 《Biochemistry》2003,42(2):458-466
Lytic peptides comprise a large group of membrane-active peptides used in the defensive and offensive systems of all organisms. Differentiating between their modes of interaction with membranes is crucial for understanding how these peptides select their target cells. Here we utilized SPR to study the interaction between lytic peptides and lipid bilayers (L1 sensor chip). Using studies also on hybrid monolayers (HPA sensor chip) revealed that SPR is a powerful tool for obtaining a real-time monitoring of the steps involved in the mode of action of membrane-active peptides, some of which previously could not be detected directly by other techniques and reported here for the first time. We investigated the mode of action of peptides that represent two major families: (i) the bee venom, melittin, as a model of a non-cell-selective peptide that forms transmembrane pores and (ii) magainin and a diastereomer of melittin (four amino acids were replaced by their D enantiomers), as models of bacteria-selective non-pore-forming peptides. Fitting the SPR data to different interaction models allows differentiating between two major steps: membrane binding and membrane insertion. Melittin binds to PC/cholesterol approximately 450-fold better than its diastereomer and magainin, mainly because it is inserted into the inner leaflet (2/3 of the binding energy), whereas the other two are not. In contrast, there is only a slight difference in the binding of all the peptides to negatively charged PE/PG mono- and bilayer membranes (in the first and second steps), indicating that the inner leaflet contributes only slightly to their binding to PE/PG bilayers. Furthermore, the 100-fold stronger binding of the cell-selective peptides to PE/PG as compared with PC/cholesterol resulted only from electrostatic attraction to the negatively charged headgroups of the outer leaflet. These results clearly differentiate between the two general mechanisms: pore formation by melittin only in zwitterionic membranes and a detergent-like effect (carpet mechanism) for all the peptides in negatively charged membranes, in agreement with their biological function.  相似文献   

8.
The binding of melittin and the C-terminally truncated analogue of melittin (21Q) to a range of phospholipid bilayers was studied using surface plasmon resonance (SPR). The phospholipid model membranes included zwitterionic dimyristylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and dimyristylphosphatidylethanolamine (DMPE), together with mixtures DMPC/dimyristylphosphatidylglycerol (DMPG), DMPC/DMPG/cholesterol and DMPE/DMPG. Melittin bound rapidly to all membrane mixtures, whereas 21Q, which has a reduced charge, bound much more slowly on the DMPC and DMPC/DMPG mixtures reflecting the role of the initial electrostatic interaction. The loss of the cationic residues also significantly decreased the binding of 21Q with DMPC/DMPG/Cholesterol, DMPE and DMPE/DMPG. The role of electrostatics was also highlighted with NaCl in the buffer, which affected the way melittin bound to the different membranes, causing a more uniform, concentration dependant increase in response. The biosensor results were correlated with the conformation of the peptides determined by circular dichroism analysis, which indicated that high α-helicity was associated with high binding affinity. Overall, the results demonstrate that the positively charged residues at the C-terminus of melittin play an essential role in membrane binding, that modulation of peptide charge influences selectivity of binding to different phospholipids and that manipulation of the cationic regions of antimicrobial peptides can be used to modulate membrane selectivity.  相似文献   

9.
The binding of the positively charged antimicrobial peptide cyclo[VKLdKVdYPLKVKLdYP] (GS14dK4) to various lipid bilayer model membranes was investigated using isothermal titration calorimetry. GS14dK4 is a diastereomeric lysine ring-size analogue of the naturally occurring antimicrobial peptide gramicidin S which exhibits enhanced antimicrobial and markedly reduced hemolytic activities compared with GS itself. Large unilamellar vesicles composed of various zwitterionic (1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylcholine [POPC]) and anionic phospholipids {1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-rac-(glycerol)] [POPG] and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phosphoserine] [POPS]}, with or without cholesterol, were used as model membrane systems. Dynamic light scattering results indicate the absence of any peptide-induced major alteration in vesicle size or vesicle fusion under our experimental conditions. The binding of GS14dK4 is significantly influenced by the surface charge density of the phospholipid bilayer and by the presence of cholesterol. Specifically, a significant reduction in the degree of binding occurs when three-fourths of the anionic lipid molecules are replaced with zwitterionic POPC molecules. No measurable binding occurs to cholesterol-containing zwitterionic vesicles, and a dramatic drop in binding is observed in the cholesterol-containing anionic POPG and POPS membranes, indicating that the presence of cholesterol markedly reduces the affinity of this peptide for phospholipid bilayers. The binding isotherms can be described quantitatively by a one-site binding model. The measured endothermic binding enthalpy (DeltaH) varies dramatically (+6.3 to +26.5 kcal/mol) and appears to be inversely related to the order of the phospholipid bilayer system. However, the negative free energy (DeltaG) of binding remains relatively constant (-8.5 to -11.5 kcal/mol) for all lipid membranes examined. The relatively small variation of negative free energy of peptide binding together with a pronounced variation of positive enthalpy produces an equally strong variation of TDeltaS (+16.2 to +35.0 kcal/mol), indicating that GS14dK4 binding to phospholipids bilayers is primarily entropy driven.  相似文献   

10.
Melittin binding to mixed phosphatidylglycerol/phosphatidylcholine membranes   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
The binding of bee venom melittin to negatively charged unilamellar vesicles and planar lipid bilayers composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoglycerol (POPG) was studied with circular dichroism and deuterium NMR spectroscopy. The melittin binding isotherm was measured for small unilamellar vesicles containing 10 or 20 mol % POPG. Due to electrostatic attraction, binding of the positively charged melittin was much enhanced as compared to the binding to neutral lipid vesicles. However, after correction for electrostatic effects by means of the Gouy-Chapman theory, all melittin binding isotherms could be described by a partition Kp = (4.5 +/- 0.6) x 10(4) M-1. It was estimated that about 50% of the total melittin surface was embedded in a hydrophobic environment. The melittin partition constant for small unilamellar vesicles was by a factor of 20 larger than that of planar bilayers and attests to the tighter lipid packing in the nonsonicated bilayers. Deuterium NMR studies were performed with coarse lipid dispersions. Binding of melittin to POPC/POPG (80/20 mol/mol) membranes caused systematic changes in the conformation of the phosphocholine and phosphoglycerol head groups which were ascribed to the influence of electrostatic charge on the choline dipole. While the negative charge of phosphatidylglycerol moved the N+ end of the choline -P-N+ dipole toward the bilayer interior, the binding of melittin reversed this effect and rotated the N+ end toward the aqueous phase. No specific melittin-POPG complexes could be detected. The phosphoglycerol head group was less affected by melittin binding than its choline counterpart.  相似文献   

11.
We investigate the role of anionic lipids in the binding to, and subsequent movement of charged protein groups in lipid membranes, to help understand the role of membrane composition in all membrane-active protein sequences. We demonstrate a small effect of phosphatidylglycerol (PG) lipids on the ability of an arginine (Arg) side chain to bind to, and cross a lipid membrane, despite possessing a neutralizing charge. We observe similar membrane deformations in lipid bilayers composed of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and PC/PG mixtures, with comparable numbers of water and lipid head groups pulled into the bilayer hydrocarbon core, and prohibitively large ~20 kcal/mol barriers for Arg transfer across each bilayer, dropping by just 2-3 kcal/mol due to the binding of PG lipids. We explore the causes of this small effect of introducing PG lipids and offer an explanation in terms of the limited membrane interaction for the choline groups of PC lipids bound to the translocating ion. Our calculations reveal a surprising lack of preference for Arg binding to PG lipids themselves, but a small increase in interfacial binding affinity for lipid bilayers containing PG lipids. These results help to explain the nature of competitive lipid binding to charged protein sequences, with implications for a wide range of membrane binding domains and cell perturbing peptides.  相似文献   

12.
The membrane-destabilizing effect of the peptide melittin on phosphatidylcholine membranes is modulated by the presence of cholesterol. This investigation shows that inclusion of 40 mol % cholesterol in 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine or 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine liposomes reduces melittin's affinity for the membrane. It is significant that the presence of cholesterol does not increase the amount of membrane-associated melittin needed to cause maximum leakage from, or major structural rearrangements of, the liposomes. Furthermore, comparison of microscopy and leakage data suggests that melittin-induced leakage occurs via different mechanisms in the cholesterol-free and cholesterol-supplemented systems. In the absence of cholesterol, leakage of carboxyfluorescein takes place from intact liposomes in a manner compatible with the presence of small melittin-induced pores. In the presence of cholesterol, on the other hand, adsorption of the peptide causes complete membrane disruption and the formation of long-lived open-bilayer structures. Moreover, in the case of cholesterol-supplemented systems, melittin induces pronounced liposome aggregation. Cryotransmission electron microscopy was used, together with ellipsometry, circular dichroism, turbidity, and leakage measurements, to investigate the effects of melittin on phosphatidylcholine membranes in the absence and presence of cholesterol. The melittin partitioning behavior in the membrane systems was estimated by means of steady-state fluorescence spectroscopy measurements.  相似文献   

13.
J E Mahaney  D D Thomas 《Biochemistry》1991,30(29):7171-7180
We have performed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) experiments on nitroxide spin labels incorporated into rabbit skeletal sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), in order to investigate the physical and functional interactions between melittin, a small basic membrane-binding peptide, and the Ca-ATPase of SR. Melittin binding to SR substantially inhibits Ca(2+)-dependent ATPase activity at 25 degrees C, with half-maximal inhibition at 9 mol of melittin bound per mole of Ca-ATPase. Saturation transfer EPR (ST-EPR) of maleimide spin-labeled Ca-ATPase showed that melittin decreases the submillisecond rotational mobility of the enzyme, with a 4-fold increase in the effective rotational correlation time (tau r) at a melittin/Ca-ATPase mole ratio of 10:1. This decreased rotational motion is consistent with melittin-induced aggregation of the Ca-ATPase. Conventional EPR was used to measure the submicrosecond rotational dynamics of spin-labeled stearic acid probes incorporated into SR. Melittin binding to SR at a melittin/Ca-ATPase mole ratio of 10:1 decreases lipid hydrocarbon chain mobility (fluidity) 25% near the surface of the membrane, but only 5% near the center of the bilayer. This gradient effect of melittin on SR fluidity suggests that melittin interacts primarily with the membrane surface. For all of these melittin effects (on enzymatic activity, protein mobility, and fluidity), increasing the ionic strength lessened the effect of melittin but did not alleviate it entirely. This is consistent with a melittin-SR interaction characterized by both hydrophobic and electrostatic forces. Since the effect of melittin on lipid fluidity alone is too small to account for the large inhibition of Ca-ATPase rotational mobility and enzymatic activity, we propose that melittin inhibits the ATPase primarily through its capacity to aggregate the enzyme, consistent with previous observations of decreased Ca-ATPase activity under conditions that decrease protein rotational mobility.  相似文献   

14.
Transmembrane osmotic gradients applied on large unilamellar 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine vesicles were used to modulate the potency of melittin to induce leakage. Melittin, an amphipathic peptide, changes the permeability of vesicles, as studied using the release of entrapped calcein, a fluorescent marker. A promotion of the ability of melittin to induce leakage was observed when a hyposomotic gradient (i.e., internal salt concentration higher than the external one) was imposed on the vesicles. It is proposed that structural perturbations caused by the osmotic pressure loosen the compactness of the outer leaflet, which facilitates the melittin-induced change in membrane permeability. Additionally, we have shown that this phenomenon is not due to enhanced binding of melittin to the vesicles using intrinsic fluorescence of the melittin tryptophan. Furthermore, we investigated the possibility of using a transmembrane pH gradient to control the lytic activity of melittin. The potency of melittin in inducing release is known to be inhibited by increased negative surface charge density. A transmembrane pH gradient causing an asymmetric distribution of unprotonated palmitic acid in the bilayer is shown to be an efficient way to modulate the lytic activity of melittin, without changing the overall lipid composition of the membrane. We demonstrate that the protective effect of negatively charged lipids is preserved for asymmetric membranes.  相似文献   

15.
Abraham T  Lewis RN  Hodges RS  McElhaney RN 《Biochemistry》2005,44(33):11279-11285
The binding of the amphiphilic, positively charged, cyclic beta-sheet antimicrobial decapeptide gramicidin S (GS) to various lipid bilayer model membrane systems was studied by isothermal titration calorimetry. Large unilamellar vesicles composed of the zwitterionic phospholipid 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine or the anionic phospholipid 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylglycerol, or a binary mixture of the two, with or without cholesterol, were used to mimic the lipid compositions of the outer monolayers of the lipid bilayers of mammalian and bacterial membranes, respectively. Dynamic light scattering results suggest the absence of major alterations in vesicle size or appreciable vesicle fusion upon the binding of GS to the lipid vesicles under our experimental conditions. The binding isotherms can be reasonably well described by a one-site binding model. GS is found to bind with higher affinity to anionic phosphatidylglycerol than to zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine vesicles, indicating that electrostatic interactions in the former system facilitate peptide binding. However, the presence of cholesterol reduced binding only slightly, indicating that the binding of GS is not highly sensitive to the order of the phospholipid bilayer system. Similarly, the measured positive endothermic binding enthalpy (DeltaH) varies only modestly (2.6 to 4.4 kcal/mol), and the negative free energy of binding (DeltaG) also remains relatively constant (-10.9 to -12.1 kcal/mol). The relatively large but invariant positive binding entropy, reflected in relatively large TDeltaS values (13.4 to 16.4 kcal/mol), indicates that GS binding to phospholipid bilayers is primarily entropy driven. Finally, the relative binding affinities of GS for various phospholipid vesicles correlate relatively well with the relative lipid specificity for GS interactions with bacterial and erythrocyte membranes observed in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
Oxyopinins (Oxki1 and Oxki2) are antimicrobial peptides isolated from the crude venom of the wolf spider Oxyopes kitabensis. The effect of oxyopinins on lipid bilayers was investigated using high-sensitivity titration calorimetry and (31)P solid-state NMR spectroscopy. High-sensitivity titration calorimetry experiments showed that the binding of oxyopinins was exothermic, and the binding enthalpies (DeltaH) to 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs) were -18.1 kcal/mol and -15.0 kcal/mol for Oxki1 and Oxki2, respectively, and peptide partition coefficient (K(p)) was found to be 3.9x10(3) M(-1). (31)P NMR spectra of 1,2-dielaidoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DEPE) membranes in the presence of oxyopinins indicated that they induced a positive curvature in lipid bilayers. The induced positive curvature was stronger in the presence of Oxki2 than in the presence of Oxki1. (31)P NMR spectra of phosphaditylcholine (PC) membranes in the presence of Oxki2 showed that Oxki2 produced micellization of membranes at low peptide concentrations, but unsaturated PC membranes or acidic phospholipids prevented micellization from occurring. Furthermore, (31)P NMR spectra using membrane lipids from E. coli suggested that Oxki1 was more disruptive to bacterial membranes than Oxki2. These results strongly correlate to the known biological activity of the oxyopinins.  相似文献   

17.
E Kuchinka  J Seelig 《Biochemistry》1989,28(10):4216-4221
The binding of melittin to nonsonicated bilayer membranes composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine was studied with an ultracentrifugation assay and with 2H and 31P nuclear magnetic resonance. Melittin binding could best be described by a partition equilibrium with Kp = (2.1 +/- 0.2) X 10(3) M-1, measuring the binding isotherm in the concentration range of 0-100 microM melittin and taking into account electrostatic effects by means of the Gouy-Chapman theory. This partition coefficient is smaller than that deduced for small sonicated vesicles and attests to the tighter lipid packing in the nonsonicated bilayers. Deuterium magnetic resonance revealed a conformational change of the phosphocholine head group upon melittin binding. The quadrupole splittings of the alpha and beta segments of the choline head group varied linearly with the amount of bound melittin but in opposite directions; i.e., the alpha splitting decreased, and the beta splitting increased. This conformational change is not specific to melittin but is a response of the phosphocholine head group to positive membrane surface charges in general. Quantitatively, melittin is one of the most efficient head-group modulators, the efficiency per unit charge comparable to that of charged local anesthetics or hydrophobic ions.  相似文献   

18.
The free energy of transfer (DeltaG degrees ) from water to lipid bilayers was measured for two amphipathic peptides, the presequence of the mitochondrial peptide rhodanese (MPR) and melittin. Experiments were designed to determine the effects on peptide partitioning of the addition of lipids that produce structural modifications to the bilayer/water interface. In particular, the addition of cholesterol or the cholesterol analog 6-ketocholestanol increases the bilayer area compressibility modulus, indicating that these molecules modify lipid-lipid interactions in the plane of the bilayer. The addition of 6-ketocholestanol or lipids with attached polyethylene glycol chains (PEG-lipids) modify the effective thickness of the interfacial region; 6-ketocholestanol increases the width of hydrophilic headgroup region in the direction of the acyl chains whereas the protruding PEG chains of PEG-lipids increase the structural width of the headgroup region into the surrounding aqueous phase. The incorporation of PEG-lipids with PEG molecular weights of 2000 or 5000 had no appreciable effect on peptide partitioning that could not be accounted for by the presence of surface charge. However, for both MPR and melittin DeltaG degrees decreased linearly with increasing bilayer compressibility modulus, demonstrating the importance of bilayer mechanical properties in the binding of amphipathic peptides.  相似文献   

19.
Klocek G  Seelig J 《Biochemistry》2008,47(9):2841-2849
Melittin is a 26-residue cationic peptide with cytolytic and antimicrobial properties. Studies on the action mechanism of melittin have focused almost exclusively on the membrane-perturbing properties of this peptide, investigating in detail the melittin-lipid interaction. Here, we report physical-chemical studies on an alternative mechanism by which melittin could interact with the cell membrane. As the outer surface of many cells is decorated with anionic (sulfated) glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), a strong Coulombic interaction between the two oppositely charged molecules can be envisaged. Indeed, the present study using isothermal titration calorimetry reveals a high affinity of melittin for several GAGs, that is, heparan sulfate (HS), dermatan sulfate, and heparin. The microscopic binding constant of melittin for HS is 2.4 x 10 (5) M (-1), the reaction enthalpy is Delta H melittin (0) = -1.50 kcal/mol, and the peptide-to-HS stoichiometry is approximately 11 at 10 mM Tris, 100 mM NaCl at pH 7.4 and 28 degrees C. Delta H melittin (0) is characterized by a molar heat capacity of Delta C P (0) = -227 cal mol (-1) K (-1). The large negative heat capacity change indicates that hydrophobic interactions must also be involved in the binding of melittin to HS. Circular dichroism spectroscopy demonstrates that the binding of the peptide to HS induces a conformational change to a predominantly alpha-helical structure. A model for the melittin-HS complex is presented. Melittin binding was compared with that of magainin 2 and nisin Z to HS. Magainin 2 is known for its antimicrobial properties, but it does not cause lysis of the eukaryotic cells. Nisin Z shows activity against various Gram-positive bacteria. Isothermal titration calorimetry demonstrates that magainin 2 and nisin Z do not bind to HS (5-50 degrees C, 10 mM Tris, and 100 mM NaCl at pH 7.4).  相似文献   

20.
Phosphorus NMR spectroscopy was used to characterize the importance of electrostatic interactions in the lytic activity of melittin, a cationic peptide. The micellization induced by melittin has been characterized for several lipid mixtures composed of saturated phosphatidylcholine (PC) and a limited amount of charged lipid. For these systems, the thermal polymorphism is similar to the one observed for pure PC: small comicelles are stable in the gel phase and extended bilayers are formed in the liquid crystalline phase. Vesicle surface charge density influences strongly the micellization. Our results show that the presence of negatively charged lipids (phospholipid or unprotonated fatty acid) reduces the proportion of lysed vesicles. Conversely, the presence of positively charged lipids leads to a promotion of the lytic activity of the peptide. The modulation of the lytic effect is proposed to originate from the electrostatic interactions between the peptide and the bilayer surface. Attractive interactions anchor the peptide at the surface and, as a consequence, inhibit its lytic activity. Conversely, repulsive interactions favor the redistribution of melittin into the bilayer, causing enhanced lysis. A quantitative analysis of the interaction between melittin and negatively charged bilayers suggests that electroneutrality is reached at the surface, before micellization. The surface charge density of the lipid layer appears to be a determining factor for the lipid/peptide stoichiometry of the comicelles; a decrease in the lipid/peptide stoichiometry in the presence of negatively charged lipids appears to be a general consequence of the higher affinity of melittin for these membranes.  相似文献   

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