首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The interaction of the neuropeptide methionine-enkephalin (Menk) with bicelles was investigated by solid-state NMR. Bicelles composed of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and dicaproylphosphatidylcholine (DCPC) were modified to investigate the effect of the lipid headgroup and electrostatic charges on the association with Menk. A total of 10 mol % of DMPC was replaced by zwitterionic phosphatidylethanolamine (DMPE), anionic phosphatidylglycerol (DMPG), or phosphatidylserine (DMPS). The preparation of DMPE-doped bicelles (Bic/PE) is reported for the first time. The (31)P and (2)H NMR results revealed changes in the lipid dynamics when Menk interacts with the bicellar systems. (2)H NMR experiments showed a disordering effect of Menk on the lipid chains in all the bicelles except Bic/PG, whereas the study of the choline headgroups indicated a decreased order of the lipids only in Bic/PE and Bic/PG. Our results suggest that the insertion depth of Menk into bicelles is modulated by their composition, more specifically by the balance between hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions. Menk would be buried at the lipid polar/apolar interface, the depth of penetration into the hydrophobic membrane core following the scaling Bic > Bic/PE > Bic/PS at the slightly acidic pH used in this study. The peptide would not insert into the bilayer core of Bic/PG and would rather remain at the surface.  相似文献   

2.
Solid-state deuterium ((2)H) NMR spectroscopy was used to study the reorientation of magnetically ordered bicelles in the presence of the paramagnetic lanthanide Eu(3+). Bicelles were composed of 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC) plus 1,2-dihexanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine plus either the anionic lipid 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-3-phosphoglycerol, or the cationic lipid 1,2-dimyristoyl-3-trimethyl ammonium propane. Alignment of the bicelles in the magnetic field produced (2)H NMR spectra consisting of a pair of quadrupole doublets, one from the alpha-deuterons and one from the beta-deuterons of DMPC-alpha,beta-d(4). Eu(3+) addition induced the appearance of a second set of quadrupole doublets, having approximately twice the quadrupolar splittings of the originals, and growing progressively in intensity with increasing Eu(3+), at the expense of the intensity of the originals. The new resonances were attributed to bicelles having a parallel alignment with respect to the magnetic field, as opposed to the perpendicular alignment preferred in the absence of Eu(3+). Therefore, the equilibrium degree and kinetics of reorientation could be evaluated from the (2)H NMR spectra. For more cationic initial surface charges, higher amounts of added Eu(3+) were required to induce a given degree of reorientation. However, the equilibrium degree of bicellar reorientation was found to depend solely on the amount of bound Eu(3+), regardless of the bicelle composition. The kinetics of reorientation were a function of lipid concentration. At high lipid concentration, a single fast rate of reorientation (minutes) described the approach to the equilibrium degree of orientation. At lower lipid concentrations, two rates processes were discernible: one fast (minutes) and one slow (hours). The data indicate, therefore, that bicelle reorientation is a phase transition made critical by bicelle-bicelle interactions.  相似文献   

3.
Kóta Z  Páli T  Marsh D 《Biophysical journal》2004,86(3):1521-1531
Gramicidin A was incorporated at a peptide/lipid ratio of 1:10 mol/mol in aligned bilayers of dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC), phosphatidylserine (DMPS), phosphatidylglycerol (DMPG), and phosphatidylethanolamine (DMPE), from trifluoroethanol. Orientations of the peptide and lipid chains were determined by polarized attenuated total reflection infrared spectroscopy. Lipid-peptide interactions with gramicidin A in DMPC bilayers were studied with different spin-labeled lipid species by using electron spin resonance spectroscopy. In DMPC membranes, the orientation of the lipid chains is comparable to that in the absence of peptide, in both gel and fluid phases. In gel-phase DMPC, the effective tilt of the peptide exceeds that of the lipid chains, but in the fluid phase both are similar. For gramicidin A in DMPS, DMPG, and DMPE, the degree of orientation of the peptide and lipid chains is less than in DMPC. In the fluid phase of DMPS, DMPG, and DMPE, gramicidin A is also less well oriented than are the lipid chains. In DMPE especially, gramicidin A is largely disordered. In DMPC membranes, three to four lipids per monomer experience direct motional restriction on interaction with gramicidin A. This is approximately half the number of lipids expected to contact the intramembranous perimeter of the gramicidin A monomer. A selectivity for certain negatively charged lipids is found in the interaction with gramicidin A in DMPC. These results are discussed in terms of the integration of gramicidin A channels in lipid bilayers, and of the interactions of lipids with integral membrane proteins.  相似文献   

4.
There is a distinct possibility that general anesthetics exert their action on the postsynaptic receptor channels. The structural requirements for anesthetic binding in transmembrane channels, however, are largely unknown. High-resolution (1)H nuclear magnetic resonance and direct photoaffinity labeling were used in this study to characterize the volatile anesthetic binding sites in gramicidin A (gA) incorporated into sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles and into dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) bilayers, respectively. To confirm that the structural arrangement of the peptide side chains can affect anesthetic binding, gA in nonchannel forms in methanol was also analyzed. The addition of volatile anesthetic halothane to gA in SDS with a channel conformation caused a concentration-dependent change in resonant frequencies of the indole amide protons of W9, W11, W13, and W15, with the most profound changes in W9. These frequency changes were observed only for gA carefully prepared to ensure a channel conformation and were absent for gA in methanol. For gA in DMPC bilayers, direct [(14)C]halothane photolabeling and microsequencing demonstrated dominant labeling of W9, less labeling of W11 and W13, and no significant labeling of W15. In methanol, gA showed much less labeling of any residues. Inspection of the 3-D structure of gA suggests that the spatial arrangements of the tryptophan residues in the channel form of gA, combined with the amphiphilic regions of lipid, create a favorable anesthetic binding motif.  相似文献   

5.
The first direct experimental evidence that gramicidin A (gA), a transmembrane peptide, facilitates the translocation of unlabeled lipids in a phospholipid bilayer was obtained with sum-frequency vibrational spectroscopy (SFVS). SFVS was used to investigate the effect of gA on lipid flip-flop in a planar 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DSPC) lipid bilayer. The kinetics of lipid translocation were determined by an analysis of the SFVS intensity versus time at different temperatures in the presence of 2 mol % gA. The rate constants of DSPC flip-flop increase from 2 to 10 times relative to the pure DSPC system. The results indicate that facial lipid exchange can be induced by a hydrophobic transmembrane helix. The increase in lipid flip-flop rates is correlated to an increase in the gauche content of the lipid tails. The results suggest that membrane defects induced by the presence of integral membrane proteins may play a large role in modulating the rate of lipid flip-flop.  相似文献   

6.
The method of sensitized photoinactivation based on the photosensitized damage of gramicidin A (gA) molecules was applied here to study ionic channels formed by minigramicidin (the 11-residue analogue of gramicidin A) in a planar bilayer lipid membrane (BLM) of different thickness. Irradiation of BLM with a single flash of visible light in the presence of a photosensitizer (aluminum phthalocyanine or Rose Bengal) generating singlet oxygen provoked a decrease in the minigramicidin-induced electric current across BLM, the kinetics of which had the characteristic time of several seconds, as observed with gA. For gA, there is good correlation between the characteristic time of photoinactivation and the single-channel lifetime. In contrast to the covalent dimer of gA characterized by extremely long single-channel lifetime and the absence of current relaxation upon flash excitation, the covalent head-to-head dimer of minigramicidin displayed the flash-induced current decrease with the kinetics being strongly dependent on the membrane thickness. The current decrease became slower both upon increasing the concentration of the minigramicidin covalent dimer and upon including cholesterol in the membrane composition. These data in combination with the quadratic dependence of the current on the peptide concentration can be rationalized by hypothesizing that the macroscopic current across BLM measured at high concentrations of the peptide is provided by dimers of minigramicidin covalent dimers in the double beta(5.7)-helical conformation having the lifetime of about 0.4 s, while single channels with the lifetime of 0.01 s, observed at a very low peptide concentration, correspond to the single-stranded beta(6.3)-helical conformation. Alternatively the results can be explained by clustering of channels at high concentrations of the minigramicidin covalent dimer.  相似文献   

7.
Gramicidin A (gA) molecules were covalently linked with a dioxolane ring. Dioxolane-linked gA dimers formed ion channels, selective for monovalent cations, in planar lipid bilayers. The main goal of this study was to compare the functional single ion channel properties of natural gA and its covalently linked dimer in two different lipid bilayers and HCl concentrations (10-8000 mM). Two ion channels with different gating and conductance properties were identified in bilayers from the product of dimerization reaction. The most commonly observed and most stable gramicidin A dimer is the main object of this study. This gramicidin dimer remained in the open state most of the time, with brief closing flickers (tau(closed) approximately 30 micros). The frequency of closing flickers increased with transmembrane potential, making the mean open time moderately voltage dependent (tau(open) changed approximately 1.43-fold/100 mV). Such gating behavior is markedly different from what is seen in natural gA channels. In PEPC (phosphatidylethanolamine-phosphatidylcholine) bilayers, single-channel current-voltage relationships had an ohmic behavior at low voltages, and a marked sublinearity at relatively higher voltages. This behavior contrasts with what was previously described in GMO (glycerylmonooleate) bilayers. In PEPC bilayers, the linear conductance of single-channel proton currents at different proton concentrations was essentially the same for both natural and gA dimers. g(max) and K(D), obtained from fitting experimental points to a Langmuir adsorption isotherm, were approximately 1500 pS and 300 mM, respectively, for both the natural gA and its dimer. In GMO bilayers, however, proton affinities of gA and the dioxolane-dimer were significantly lower (K(D) of approximately 1 and 1.5 M, respectively), and the g(max) higher (approximately 1750 and 2150 pS, respectively) than in PEPC bilayers. Furthermore, the relationship between single-channel conductance and proton concentration was linear at low bulk concentrations of H+ (0.01-2 M) and saturated at concentrations of more than 3 M. It is concluded that 1) The mobility of protons in gramicidin A channels in different lipid bilayers is remarkably similar to proton mobilities in aqueous solutions. In particular, at high concentrations of HCl, proton mobilities in gramicidin A channel and in solution differ by only 25%. 2) Differences between proton conductances in gramicidin A channels in GMO and PEPC cannot be explained by surface charge effects on PEPC membranes. It is proposed that protonated phospholipids adjacent to the mouth of the pore act as an additional source of protons for conduction through gA channels in relation to GMO bilayers. 3) Some experimental results cannot be reconciled with simple alterations in access resistance to proton flow in gA channels. Said differences could be explained if the structure and/or dynamics of water molecules inside gramicidin A channels is modulated by the lipid environment and by modifications in the structure of gA channels. 4) The dioxolane ring is probably responsible for the closing flickers seen in the dimer channel. However, other factors can also influence closing flickers.  相似文献   

8.
The first direct experimental evidence that gramicidin A (gA), a transmembrane peptide, facilitates the translocation of unlabeled lipids in a phospholipid bilayer was obtained with sum-frequency vibrational spectroscopy (SFVS). SFVS was used to investigate the effect of gA on lipid flip-flop in a planar 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DSPC) lipid bilayer. The kinetics of lipid translocation were determined by an analysis of the SFVS intensity versus time at different temperatures in the presence of 2 mol % gA. The rate constants of DSPC flip-flop increase from 2 to 10 times relative to the pure DSPC system. The results indicate that facial lipid exchange can be induced by a hydrophobic transmembrane helix. The increase in lipid flip-flop rates is correlated to an increase in the gauche content of the lipid tails. The results suggest that membrane defects induced by the presence of integral membrane proteins may play a large role in modulating the rate of lipid flip-flop.  相似文献   

9.
The method of sensitized photoinactivation based on the photosensitized damage of gramicidin A (gA) molecules was applied here to study ionic channels formed by minigramicidin (the 11-residue analogue of gramicidin A) in a planar bilayer lipid membrane (BLM) of different thickness. Irradiation of BLM with a single flash of visible light in the presence of a photosensitizer (aluminum phthalocyanine or Rose Bengal) generating singlet oxygen provoked a decrease in the minigramicidin-induced electric current across BLM, the kinetics of which had the characteristic time of several seconds, as observed with gA. For gA, there is good correlation between the characteristic time of photoinactivation and the single-channel lifetime. In contrast to the covalent dimer of gA characterized by extremely long single-channel lifetime and the absence of current relaxation upon flash excitation, the covalent head-to-head dimer of minigramicidin displayed the flash-induced current decrease with the kinetics being strongly dependent on the membrane thickness. The current decrease became slower both upon increasing the concentration of the minigramicidin covalent dimer and upon including cholesterol in the membrane composition. These data in combination with the quadratic dependence of the current on the peptide concentration can be rationalized by hypothesizing that the macroscopic current across BLM measured at high concentrations of the peptide is provided by dimers of minigramicidin covalent dimers in the double β5.7-helical conformation having the lifetime of about 0.4 s, while single channels with the lifetime of 0.01 s, observed at a very low peptide concentration, correspond to the single-stranded β6.3-helical conformation. Alternatively the results can be explained by clustering of channels at high concentrations of the minigramicidin covalent dimer.  相似文献   

10.
Gramicidin A (gA) is a 15-amino-acid antibiotic peptide with an alternating L-D sequence, which forms (dimeric) bilayer-spanning, monovalent cation channels in biological membranes and synthetic bilayers. We performed molecular dynamics simulations of gA dimers and monomers in all-atom, explicit dilauroylphosphatidylcholine (DLPC), dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC), dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC), and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) bilayers. The variation in acyl chain length among these different phospholipids provides a way to alter gA-bilayer interactions by varying the bilayer hydrophobic thickness, and to determine the influence of hydrophobic mismatch on the structure and dynamics of both gA channels (and monomeric subunits) and the host bilayers. The simulations show that the channel structure varied little with changes in hydrophobic mismatch, and that the lipid bilayer adapts to the bilayer-spanning channel to minimize the exposure of hydrophobic residues. The bilayer thickness, however, did not vary monotonically as a function of radial distance from the channel. In all simulations, there was an initial decrease in thickness within 4–5 Å from the channel, which was followed by an increase in DOPC and POPC or a further decrease in DLPC and DMPC bilayers. The bilayer thickness varied little in the monomer simulations—except one of three independent simulations for DMPC and all three DLPC simulations, where the bilayer thinned to allow a single subunit to form a bilayer-spanning water-permeable pore. The radial dependence of local lipid area and bilayer compressibility is also nonmonotonic in the first shell around gA dimers due to gA-phospholipid interactions and the hydrophobic mismatch. Order parameters, acyl chain dynamics, and diffusion constants also differ between the lipids in the first shell and the bulk. The lipid behaviors in the first shell around gA dimers are more complex than predicted from a simple mismatch model, which has implications for understanding the energetics of membrane protein-lipid interactions.  相似文献   

11.
Gramicidin crystals, dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC)/gramicidin dispersions, and DMPC/gramicidin cocrystals were examined by Raman scattering to determine lipid/gramicidin stoichiometries and lipid organization. Calibrations of the choline (716-cm-1) and tryptophan (756-cm-1) peaks indicate that the cocrystals contain two lipids for each gramicidin monomer, a result confirmed by chemical analyses of washed crystals. In dispersions with high lipid/gramicidin ratios (e.g., 25:1), the lipid is ordered but becomes increasingly disordered as the gramicidin content is increased. Paradoxically, the DMPC/gramicidin cocrystals have highly ordered lipids that possibly contain no gauche bonds at all, despite their low lipid/gramicidin ratio. In addition, the polypeptide amide I peak position near 1670 cm-1 is found to be independent of the lipid/gramicidin ratio in the complexes and may indicate a beta-helix-type secondary structure at all ratios. However, the amide I peak broadens significantly at low lipid/gramicidin ratios and broadens still further in the cocrystals, suggesting that protein-protein interactions may induce band-broadening distortions of the polypeptide structure.  相似文献   

12.
We present a quantitative analysis of the effects of hydrophobic matching and membrane-mediated protein-protein interactions exhibited by gramicidin embedded in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and dilauroylphosphatidylcholine (DLPC) bilayers (Harroun et al., 1999. Biophys. J. 76:937-945). Incorporating gramicidin, at 1:10 peptide/lipid molar ratio, decreases the phosphate-to-phosphate (PtP) peak separation in the DMPC bilayer from 35.3 A without gramicidin to 32.7 A. In contrast, the same molar ratio of gramicidin in DLPC increases the PtP from 30.8 A to 32.1 A. Concurrently, x-ray in-plane scattering showed that the most probable nearest-neighbor separation between gramicidin channels was 26.8 A in DLPC, but reduced to 23.3 A in DMPC. In this paper we review the idea of hydrophobic matching in which the lipid bilayer deforms to match the hydrophobic surface of the embedded proteins. We use a simple elasticity theory, including thickness compression, tension, and splay terms to describe the membrane deformation. The energy of membrane deformation is compared with the energy cost of hydrophobic mismatch. We discuss the boundary conditions between a gramicidin channel and the lipid bilayer. We used a numerical method to solve the problem of membrane deformation profile in the presence of a high density of gramicidin channels and ran computer simulations of 81 gramicidin channels to find the equilibrium distributions of the channels in the plane of the bilayer. The simulations contain four parameters: bilayer thickness compressibility 1/B, bilayer bending rigidity Kc, the channel-bilayer mismatch Do, and the slope of the interface at the lipid-protein boundary s. B, Kc, and Do were experimentally measured; the only free parameter is s. The value of s is determined by the requirement that the theory produces the experimental values of bilayer thinning by gramicidin and the shift in the peak position of the in-plane scattering due to membrane-mediated channel-channel interactions. We show that both hydrophobic matching and membrane-mediated interactions can be understood by the simple elasticity theory.  相似文献   

13.
To explore the possible role of Trp side chains in gramicidin channel conductance dispersity, we studied the dispersity of gramicidin M (gM), a gramicidin variant in which all four tryptophan residues are replaced with phenylalanine residues, and its enantiomer, gramicidin M(-) (gM(-)), and compared them to that of gramicidin A (gA). The conductances of highly purified gM and gM(-) were studied in alkali metal solutions at a variety of concentrations and voltages, in seven different types of lipid, and in the presence of detergent. Like gA channels, the most common gM channel conductance forms a narrow band. However, unlike gA channels, where the remaining 5-30% of channel conductances are broadly distributed below (and slightly above) the main band, in gM there is a narrow secondary band with <50% of the main peak conductance. This secondary peak was prominent in NaCl and KCl, but significantly diminished in CsCl and RbCl. Under some conditions, minor components can be observed with conductances yet lower than the secondary peak. Interconversions between the primary conductance state and these yet lower conductance states were observed. The current-voltage relations for both primary and secondary gM channel types have about the same curvature. The mean lifetime of the secondary channel type is below one third that of the primary type. The variants represent state deviations in the peptide or adjacent lipid structure.  相似文献   

14.
Bilayered micelles, or bicelles, which consist of a mixture of long- and short-chain phospholipids, are a popular model membrane system. Depending on composition, concentration, and temperature, bicelle mixtures may adopt an isotropic phase or form an aligned phase in magnetic fields. Well-resolved (1)H NMR spectra are observed in the isotropic or so-called fast-tumbling bicelle phase, over the range of temperatures investigated (10-40 degrees C), for molar ratios of long-chain lipid to short-chain lipid between 0.20 and 1.0. Small angle neutron scattering data of this phase are consistent with the model in which bicelles were proposed to be disk-shaped. The experimentally determined dimensions are roughly consistent with the predictions of R.R. Vold and R.S. Prosser (J. Magn. Reson. B 113 (1996)). Differential paramagnetic shifts of head group resonances of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and dihexanoylphosphatidylcholine (DHPC), induced by the addition of Eu(3+), are also consistent with the bicelle model in which DHPC is believed to be primarily sequestered to bicelle rims. Selective irradiation of the DHPC aliphatic methyl resonances results in no detectable magnetization transfer to the corresponding DMPC methyl resonances (and vice versa) in bicelles, which also suggests that DHPC and DMPC are largely sequestered in the bicelle. Finally, (1)H spectra of the antibacterial peptide indolicidin (ILPWKWPWWPWRR-NH(2)) are compared, in a DPC micellar phase and the above fast-tumbling bicellar phases for a variety of compositions. The spectra exhibit adequate resolution and improved dispersion of amide and aromatic resonances in certain bicelle mixtures.  相似文献   

15.
Lin TH  Huang HB  Wei HA  Shiao SH  Chen YC 《Biopolymers》2005,78(4):179-186
The present study investigated the effect of temperature and lipid/peptide molar ratio on the conformational changes of the membrane peptide gramicidin A from a double-stranded helix to a single-stranded helical dimmer in 1,2-dimyristoyl-glycerol-3-phosphochloine (DMPC) vesicles. Tryptophan fluorescence spectroscopy results suggested that the conformational transition fitted a three-state (two-step) "folding" model. Rate constants, k(1) and k(2), were determined for each of the two steps. Since k(1) and k(2) increased with an increase in temperature, we hypothesized that the process corresponded to the breakage and formation of the backbone hydrogen bonds. The k(1) was from 10 to 45 folds faster than k(2), except for lipid/peptide molar ratios above 89.21, where k(2) increased rapidly. At molar ratios below 89.21, k(2) was insensitive to changes in lipid concentration. To account for this phenomenon, we proposed that while the driving interaction at high molar ratios is between the indole rings of the tryptophan residues and the lipid head groups, at low molar ratios there may be an intermolecular interaction between the tryptophan residues that causes gramicidin A to form an organized aggregated network. This aggregated network, caused by the tryptophan-tryptophan interaction, may be the main effect responsible for the slow down of the conformation change.  相似文献   

16.
The association of anionic polyelectrolytes such as dextran sulfate (DS) to zwitterionic phospholipid surfaces via Ca(2+) bridges results in a perturbation of lipid packing at physiologically relevant Ca(2+) concentrations. Lipid area compression was investigated in 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC) multilamellar bilayer dispersions by (2)H-NMR and in monolayer studies. Binding of DS to DMPC surfaces via Ca(2+) results in denser lipid packing, as indicated by higher lipid chain order. DMPC order parameters are homogeneously increased throughout the lipid bilayer. Higher order translates into more extended hydrocarbon chains and decreased average lipid area per molecule. Area compression is reported as a function of DS concentration and molecular weight. Altering the NaCl and Ca(2+) concentrations modified electrostatic interactions between DS and phospholipid. A maximal area reduction of DeltaA = 2.7 A(2) per DMPC molecule is observed. The lipid main-phase transition temperature increases upon formation of DMPC/Ca(2+)/DS-complexes. Lipid area compression after addition of DS and Ca(2+) to the subphase was also observed in monolayer experiments. A decrease in surface tension of up to 3.5 mN/m at constant molecular area was observed. DS binds to the lipid headgroups by formation of Ca(2+) bridges without penetrating the hydrophobic region. We suggest that area compression is the result of an attractive electrostatic interaction between neighboring lipid molecules induced by high local Ca(2+) concentration due to the presence of DS. X-ray diffraction experiments demonstrate that DS binding to apposing bilayers reduces bilayer separation. We speculate that DS binding alters the phase state of low-density lipoproteins that associate with polyelectrolytes of the arterial connective tissue in the early stages of arteriosclerosis.  相似文献   

17.
The interactions between an aliphatic or phenyl side chain and an indole ring in a phospholipid environment were investigated by synthesizing and characterizing gramicidins in which Trp(9) was ring-labeled and D-Leu(10) was replaced by D-Val, D-Ala, or D-Phe. All three analogues form conducting channels, with conductances that are lower than that of gramicidin A (gA) channels. The channel lifetimes vary by less than 50% from that of gA channels. Circular dichroism spectra and size-exclusion chromatography show that the conformation of each analogue in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) vesicles is similar to the right-handed beta(6.3)-helical conformation that is observed for gA. (2)H NMR spectra of oriented samples in DMPC show large changes for the Trp(9) ring when residue 10 is modified, suggesting a steric interaction between D-Leu(10) and Trp(9), in agreement with previous acylation studies (R. E. Koeppe II et al. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 9299-9307). The outer quadrupolar splitting for Trp(9) is unchanged with D-Phe(10), at approximately 153 kHz, but increases by approximately 25 kHz with D-Val(10) and decreases by approximately 10 kHz with D-Ala(10). With D-Ala(10) or D-Val(10), the outer resonance splits into two in a temperature-dependent manner. The NMR spectra indicate that the side chain torsion angles chi1 and chi2 for Trp(9) change when residue 10 is substituted. The changes in chi1 are small, in all cases less than 10 degrees, as is Deltachi2 when D-Ala(10) is introduced, but with D-Val(10) and D-Phe(10) Deltachi2 is at least 25 degrees. We conclude that D-Leu(10) helps to stabilize an optimal orientation of Trp(9) in gA channels in lipid bilayers and that changes in Trp orientation alter channel conductance and lifetime without affecting the basic channel fold.  相似文献   

18.
Insertion of charged groups at the N-terminus of the gramicidin A (gA) amino acid sequence is considered to be fatal for peptide channel-forming activity because of hindrance to the head-to-head dimer formation. Here the induction of ionic conductivity in planar bilayer lipid membranes (BLM) was studied with gA analogs having lysine either in the first ([Lys1]gA) or the third ([Lys3]gA) position. If added to the bathing solution at neutral or acidic pH, these analogs, being protonated and thus positively charged, were unable to induce ionic current across BLM. By contrast, at pH 11 the induction of BLM conductivity was observed with both lysine-substituted analogs. Based on the dependence of the macroscopic current on the side of the peptide addition, sensitivity to calcium ions and susceptibility to sensitized photoinactivation, as well as on the single-channel properties of the analogs, we surmise that at alkaline pH [Lys1]gA formed channels with predominantly single-stranded structure of head-to-head helical dimers, whereas [Lys3]gA open channels had the double-stranded helical structure. CD spectra of the lysine-substituted analogs in liposomes were shown to be pH-dependent.  相似文献   

19.
Model class A amphipathic helical peptides mimic several properties of apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I), the major protein component of high density lipoproteins. Previously, we reported the NMR structures of Ac-18A-NH(2) (renamed as 2F because of two phenylalanines), the base-line model class A amphipathic helical peptide in the presence of lipid ( Mishra, V. K., Anantharamaiah, G. M., Segrest, J. P., Palgunachari, M. N., Chaddha, M., Simon Sham, S. W., and Krishna, N. R. (2006) J Biol. Chem. 281, 6511-6519 ). Substitution of two Leu residues on the nonpolar face (Leu(3) and Leu(14)) with Phe residues produced the peptide 4F (so named because of four phenylalanines), which has been extensively studied for its anti-inflammatory and antiatherogenic properties. Like 2F, 4F also forms discoidal nascent high density lipoprotein-like particles with 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC). Since subtle structural changes in the peptide-lipid complexes have been shown to be responsible for their antiatherogenic properties, we undertook high resolution NMR studies to deduce detailed structure of 4F in 4F.DMPC discs. Like 2F, 4F adopts a well defined amphipathic alpha-helical structure in association with the lipid at a 1:1 peptide/lipid weight ratio. Nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) spectroscopy revealed a number of intermolecular close contacts between the aromatic residues in the hydrophobic face of the helix and the lipid acyl chain protons. Similar to 2F, the pattern of observed peptide-lipid NOEs is consistent with a parallel orientation of the amphipathic alpha helix, with respect to the plane of the lipid bilayer, on the edge of the disc (the belt model). However, in contrast to 2F in 2F.DMPC, 4F in the 4F.DMPC complex is located closer to the lipid headgroup as evidenced by a number of NOEs between 4F and DMPC headgroup protons. These NOEs are absent in the 2F.DMPC complex. In addition, the conformation of the DMPC sn-3 chain in 4F.DMPC complex is different than in the 2F.DMPC complex as evidenced by the NOE between lipid 2.CH and betaCH(2) protons in 4F.DMPC, but not in 2F.DMPC, complex. Based on the results of this study, we infer that the antiatherogenic properties of 4F may result from its preferential interaction with lipid headgroups.  相似文献   

20.
Small fast-tumbling bicelles are ideal for studies of membrane interactions at molecular level; they allow analysis of lipid properties using solution-state NMR. In the present study we used 31P NMR relaxation to obtain detailed information on lipid head-group dynamics. We explored the effect of two topologically different membrane-interacting peptides on bicelles containing either dimyristoylphosphocholine (DMPC), or a mixture of DMPC and dimyristoylphosphoglycerol (DMPG), and dihexanoylphosphocholine (DHPC). KALP21 is a model transmembrane peptide, designed to span a DMPC bilayer and dynorphin B is a membrane surface active neuropeptide. KALP21 causes significant increase in bicelle size, as evidenced by both dynamic light scattering and 31P T2 relaxation measurements. The effect of dynorphin B on bicelle size is more modest, although significant effects on T2 relaxation are observed at higher temperatures. A comparison of 31P T1 values for the lipids with and without the peptides showed that dynorphin B has a greater effect on lipid head-group dynamics than KALP21, especially at elevated temperatures. From the field-dependence of T1 relaxation data, a correlation time describing the overall lipid motion was derived. Results indicate that the positively charged dynorphin B decreases the mobility of the lipid molecules  – in particular for the negatively charged DMPG – while KALP21 has a more modest influence. Our results demonstrate that while a transmembrane peptide has severe effects on overall bilayer properties, the surface bound peptide has a more dramatic effect in reducing lipid head-group mobility. These observations may be of general importance for understanding peptide–membrane interactions.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号