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1.
The interactions of a series of amphipathic alpha-helical peptides containing from 6 to 18 amino acid residues with dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) were studied by optical and calorimetric methods. Several peptides rapidly decreased the turbidity of DMPC and DPPC liposomes when mixed at the phase transition temperatures of the lipids. The extent of the clearing depended upon the chain length of the peptides, with the most effective clearing attained with peptides 10-12 residues in length. An eight-residue peptide was somewhat less effective and a six-residue peptide had no effect on liposome structure. The peptides formed small micellar structures, as judged by gel filtration chromatography. The effects of the peptides on the phase transitions of the lipids were examined by differential scanning calorimetry. The peptides that were most effective in disrupting the liposomes and forming clear micelles were also most effective in reducing the enthalpy of the gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition of the lipid. The addition of DMPC or DPPC liposomes to the peptides increased the magnitude of the negative bonds at 208 and 222 nm in circular dichroism measurements, consistent with the expected formation of alpha-helical structure on binding to lipid. The extent of burial of the single tryptophan residue in the peptides was determined by fluorescence spectroscopy. In peptides that bound to lipid, the tryptophan was in a less solvent-exposed environment in the presence of lipid, as evidenced by a blue shift in the fluorescence emission maximum of the peptide.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The carboxyl terminus of the type-1 angiotensin II receptor (AT(1A)) is a focal point for receptor activation and deactivation. Synthetic peptides corresponding to the membrane-proximal, first 20 amino acids of the carboxyl terminus adopt an alpha-helical conformation in organic solvents, suggesting that the secondary structure of this region may be sensitive to hydrophobic environments. Using surface plasmon resonance, immobilized lipid chromatography, and circular dichroism, we examined whether this positively charged, amphipathic alpha-helical region of the AT(1A) receptor can interact with lipid components in the cell membrane and thereby modulate local receptor attachment and structure. A synthetic peptide corresponding to the proximal region of the AT(1A) receptor carboxyl terminus (Leu(305) to Lys(325)) was shown by surface plasmon resonance to bind with high affinity to the negatively charged lipid, dimyristoyl L-alpha-phosphatidyl-DL-glycerol (DMPG), but poorly to the zwitterionic lipid, dimyristoyl L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC). In contrast, a peptide analogue possessing substitutions at four lysine residues (corresponding to Lys(307,308,310,311)) displayed poor association with either lipid, indicating a crucial anionic component to the interaction. Circular dichroism analysis revealed that both the wild-type and substituted peptides possessed alpha-helical propensity in methanol and trifluoroethanol, while the wild-type peptide also adopted partially inserted helical structure in DMPG and DMPC liposomes. In contrast, the substituted peptide exhibited spectra that suggested the presence of beta-sheet and alpha-helical structure in both liposomes. Immobilized lipid chromatography was used to characterize the hydrophobic component of the membrane interaction, and the results demonstrated that hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions mediated the binding of the wild-type peptide but that the substituted peptide bound to the model membranes mainly via hydrophobic forces. We propose that, in intact AT(1A) receptors, the proximal carboxyl terminus associates with the cytoplasmic face of the cell membrane via a high-affinity, anionic phospholipid-specific tethering that serves to increase the amphipathic helicity of this region. Such associations may be important for receptor function and common for G protein-coupled receptors.  相似文献   

3.
Staphylococcal delta-toxin, a 26-residue amphiphilic peptide is lytic for cells and phospholipid vesicles and is assumed to insert as an amphipathic helix and oligomerize in membranes. For the first time, the relationship between these properties and toxin structure is investigated by means of eight synthetic peptides, one identical in sequence to the natural toxin, five 26-residue analogues and two shorter peptides corresponding to residues 1-11 and 11-26. These peptides were designed by the Edmundson wheel axial projection in order to maintain: (a) the hydrophilic/hydrophobic balance while rationalizing the sequence, (b) the alpha-helical configuration and (c) the common epitopic structure. The fluorescence of the single Trp residue was used to monitor the behaviour of the natural toxin and analogues. All 26-residue analogues were hemolytically active although to a lesser extent than natural toxin. The peptide of residues 11-26 bound lipids weakly and was hemolytic at high concentration. The peptide of residues 1-11 did not bind lipids and was hemolytically inactive. All peptides except the latter cross-reacted in immunoprecipitation tests with the natural toxin. The study of a 26-residue analogue by circular dichroism revealed an alpha-helical configuration in both the free and lipid-bound state. Changes in the fluorescence of the peptides in the presence of lipid micelles and bilayers varied according to the position of the reporter group. When bound to lipids, Trp5, Trp16 and the Fmoc-1 positions of the analogues became buried while Trp15 of the natural toxin and its synthetic replicate remained more exposed. All changes are rationalized by the proposal of an amphipathic helix whose hydrophobic face is embedded within the apolar core of bilayers while the hydrophilic and charged face remains more exposed to solvent.  相似文献   

4.
The binding of basic amphipathic fluorescent peptides to lipid bilayers was studied in relation to their antimicrobial activity. Four fluorescent peptides containing pyrenylalanine or tryptophan in an amphipathic basic peptide (4(4] consisting of four repeated units of tetrapeptide, -L-Leu-L-Ala-L-Arg-L-Leu-, were found to have antimicrobial activities against Gram-positive bacteria and to take conformations with fairly high alpha-helical content both in aqueous solutions and liposomes. The fluorescence spectroscopic data suggested that the pyrenylalanine-peptide existed as a monomer in methanol or liposomes but as an oligomer in aqueous solutions to form an excimer between pyrenylalanyl residues. Upon binding with liposomes, the fluorescence spectra of the tryptophan-containing peptide shifted to a shorter wavelength, indicating the change in the state of tryptophan from hydrophilic environment to hydrophobic one. The analytical data for the quenching of tryptophan fluorescence by I- anion suggest that the tryptophan residue in the peptide is not deeply buried in the hydrophobic core of the bilayers. Based on these findings, it is suggested that the peptides may interact with liposomes in such a manner that they lie parallel to the surface of the lipid bilayers with their hydrophobic regions shallowly in the amphipathic moiety of the bilayers.  相似文献   

5.
All known naturally occurring linear cationic peptides adopt an amphipathic alpha-helical conformation upon binding to lipids as an initial step in the induction of cell leakage. We designed an 18-residue peptide, (KIGAKI)3-NH2, that has no amphipathic character as an alpha-helix but can form a highly amphipathic beta-sheet. When bound to lipids, (KIGAKI)3-NH2 did indeed form a beta-sheet structure as evidenced by Fourier transform infrared and circular dichroism spectroscopy. The antimicrobial activity of this peptide was compared with that of (KIAGKIA)3-NH2, and it was better than that of GMASKAGAIAGKIAKVALKAL-NH2 (PGLa) and (KLAGLAK)3-NH2, all of which form amphipathic alpha-helices when bound to membranes. (KIGAKI)3-NH2 was much less effective at inducing leakage in lipid vesicles composed of mixtures of the acidic lipid, phosphatidylglycerol, and the neutral lipid, phosphatidylcholine, as compared with the other peptides. However, when phosphatidylethanolamine replaced phosphatidylcholine, the lytic potency of PGLa and the alpha-helical model peptides was reduced, whereas that of (KIGAKI)3-NH2 was improved. Fluorescence experiments using analogs containing a single tryptophan residue showed significant differences between (KIGAKI)3-NH2 and the alpha-helical peptides in their interactions with lipid vesicles. Because the data suggest enhanced selectivity between bacterial and mammalian lipids, linear amphipathic beta-sheet peptides such as (KIGAKI)3-NH2 warrant further investigation as potential antimicrobial agents.  相似文献   

6.
We have studied the fusion of small unilamellar vesicles composed of egg PC and of a mixture of egg PC plus egg PA using various basic amphipathic peptides. Fusion was monitored by carboxyfluorescein leakage assay, light scattering, membrane intermixing assay, contents mixing assay and electron microscopy. Ac-(L-Leu-L-Ala-L-Arg-L-Leu)3-NHCH3 (peptide 4(3] and Ac-(L-Leu-L-Ala-L-Lys-L-Leu)3-NHCH3 (peptide 4'3), which have high hydrophobic moments, caused transformation of small unilamellar vesicles into larger and relatively homogeneous ones. Ac-(L-Leu-L-Leu-L-Ala-L-Arg-L-Leu)2-NHCH3 (5(2], which has medium hydrophobic moment, induced weak but appreciable fusion, while Ac-(L-Ala-L-Arg-L-Leu)3-NHCH3 (3(3] which has no helical structure did not show any fusion. However, peptides 4(3), 4'3 and 5(2) caused massive leakage of the contents from small unilamellar vesicles. These results indicated that interaction of the peptides with artificial membranes caused extensive perturbation of the lipid bilayer, followed by fusion. The fusogenic capacity of model basic peptides was correlated with the hydrophobic moment of each peptide when the peptides adopted an alpha-helical structure in the presence of acidic liposomes. Peptides 4(3) and 4'3 also showed weak fusogenic ability for neutral liposomes, while 5(2) and 3(3) showed no ability, suggesting that highly amphipathic peptides, such as 4(3), interact weakly but distinctly with neutral liposomes to fuse them.  相似文献   

7.
A clear understanding of the specific secondary structure and binding domain resulting from the interactions of proteins and peptides with lipid surfaces will provide insight into the specific functions of biologically active molecules. We have shown in earlier studies that the stationary phases used in reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography represent a model artificial lipid surface for the study of induced conformational states of peptides on lipid interaction. We have now used reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography to determine the binding domains of peptides and, by extension, of proteins to a lipid surface. This approach consists of performing chemical modifications of specific amino acid side-chain functionalities after the interaction of the peptides with the reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography C18 groups. The susceptibility to oxidation was also studied after binding of the same peptides to liposomes. Oxidation of a single methionine residue "walked" through an amphipathic alpha-helical 18-mer peptide was selected to illustrate this approach. The extent of oxidation was found to be clearly dictated by the accessibility of the methionine residue to the aqueous mobile phase. The binding domain found for the peptide in its lipid-induced conformational state was unequivocally the entire hydrophobic face of the amphipathic alpha-helix.  相似文献   

8.
The design of amphipathic peptides resulted in a novel peptide with a selective ability to destabilize lipid bilayers of acidic liposomes. The newly synthesized peptide, termed mast 21, is a 21-residue long amino acid chain and can only act effectively on acidic liposomes lacking cholesterol. Moreover, mast 21 killed gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria, and it had no hemolytic activity. The antimicrobial and hemolytic activities paralleled the results of membrane destabilizing activity using liposomes. Circular dichroism and Trp-fluorescence emission spectra showed changes in the peptide conformation and circumstances around the peptide during interaction with liposomes. These changes were consistent with an increased alpha-helical content and a less polar environment for the tryptophan residue of the peptide. Mast 21 was observed under dark-field microscopy in real time attacking liposomes. Acidic liposomes were attacked, which resulted in peeling of the lipid bilayer with its subsequent destruction.  相似文献   

9.
The peptide NK-2 is an effective antimicrobial agent with low hemolytic and cytotoxic activities and is thus a promising candidate for clinical applications. It comprises the alpha-helical, cationic core region of porcine NK-lysin a homolog of human granulysin and of amoebapores of pathogenic amoeba. Here we visualized the impact of NK-2 on Escherichia coli by electron microscopy and used NK-2 as a template for sequence variations to improve the peptide stability and activity and to gain insight into the structure/function relationships. We synthesized 18 new peptides and tested their activities on seven Gram-negative and one Gram-positive bacterial strains, human erythrocytes, and HeLa cells. Although all peptides appeared unordered in buffer, those active against bacteria adopted an alpha-helical conformation in membrane-mimetic environments like trifluoroethanol and negatively charged phosphatidylglycerol (PG) liposomes that mimick the cytoplasmic membrane of bacteria. This conformation was not observed in the presence of liposomes consisting of zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine (PC) typical for the human cell plasma membrane. The interaction was paralleled by intercalation of these peptides into PG liposomes as determined by FRET spectroscopy. A comparative analysis between biological activity and the calculated peptide parameters revealed that the decisive factor for a broad spectrum activity is not the peptide overall hydrophobicity or amphipathicity, but the possession of a minimal positive net charge plus a highly amphipathic anchor point of only seven amino acid residues (two helical turns).  相似文献   

10.
Peptides composed of leucyl and lysyl residues ('LK peptides') with different compositions and sequences were compared for their antibacterial activities using cell wall-less bacteria of the class Mollicutes (acholeplasmas, mycoplasmas and spiroplasmas) as targets. The antibacterial activity of the amphipathic alpha-helical peptides varied with their size, 15 residues being the optimal length, independent of the membrane hydrophobic core thickness and the amount of cholesterol. The 15-residue ideally amphipathic alpha helix with a +5 positive net charge (KLLKLLLKLLLKLLK) had the strongest antibacterial activity, similar to that of melittin. In contrast, scrambled peptides devoid of amphipathy and the less hydrophobic beta-sheeted peptides [(LK)nK], even those 15-residue long, were far less potent than the helical ones. Furthermore, the growth inhibitory activity of the peptides was correlated with their ability to abolish membrane potential. These data are fully consistent with a predominantly flat orientation of LK peptides at the lipid/water interface and strongly supports that these peptides and probably the linear polycationic amphipathic defence peptides act on bacterial membranes in four main steps according to the 'carpet' model: (a) interfacial partitioning with accumulation of monomers on the target membrane (limiting step); (b) peptide structural changes (conformation, aggregation, and orientation) induced by interactions with the lipid bilayer (as already shown with liposomes and erythrocytes); (c) plasma membrane permeabilization/depolarization via a detergent-like effect; and (d) rapid bacterial cell death if the extent of depolarization is maintained above a critical threshold.  相似文献   

11.
Yang ST  Lee JY  Kim HJ  Eu YJ  Shin SY  Hahm KS  Kim JI 《The FEBS journal》2006,273(17):4040-4054
Model amphipathic peptides have been widely used as a tool to determine the structural and biological properties that control the interaction of peptides with membranes. Here, we have focused on the role of a central Pro in membrane-active peptides. To determine the role of Pro in structure, antibiotic activity, and interaction with phospholipids, we generated a series of model amphipathic alpha-helical peptides with different chain lengths and containing or lacking a single central Pro. CD studies showed that Pro-free peptides (PFPs) formed stable alpha-helical structures even in aqueous buffer through self-association, whereas Pro-containing peptides (PCPs) had random coil structures. In contrast, in trifluoroethanol or SDS micelles, both PFPs and PCPs adopted highly ordered alpha-helical structures, although relatively lower helical contents were observed for the PCPs than the PFPs. This structural consequence indicates that a central Pro residue limits the formation of highly helical aggregates in aqueous buffer and causes a partial distortion of the stable alpha-helix in membrane-mimetic environments. With regard to antibiotic activity, PCPs had a 2-8-fold higher antibacterial activity and significantly reduced hemolytic activity compared with PFPs. In membrane depolarization assays, PCPs passed rapidly across the peptidoglycan layer and immediately dissipated the membrane potential in Staphylococcus aureus, whereas PFPs had a greatly reduced ability. Fluorescence studies indicated that, although PFPs had strong binding affinity for both zwitterionic and anionic liposomes, PCPs interacted weakly with zwitterionic liposomes and strongly with anionic liposomes. The selective membrane interaction of PCPs with negatively charged phospholipids may explain their antibacterial selectivity. The difference in mode of action between PCPs and PFPs was further supported by kinetic analysis of surface plasmon resonance data. The possible role of the increased local backbone distortion or flexibility introduced by the proline residue in the antimicrobial mode of action is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Apolipophorin-III (apoLp-III) from the insect, Manduca sexta, is a 166-residue exchangeable apolipoprotein that plays a critical role in the dynamics of plasma lipoprotein interconversions. Our previous work indicated that a 36-residue C-terminal peptide fragment, generated by cyanogen bromide digestion of apoLp-III, was unable to bind to lipid surfaces (Narayanaswami V, Kay CM, Oikawa K, Ryan RO, 1994, Biochemistry 33:13312-13320), and showed no secondary structure in aqueous solution. In this paper, we have performed structural studies of this peptide (E131-Q166) complexed with SDS detergent micelles, or in the presence of the helix-inducing solvent trifluoroethanol (TFE), by two-dimensional 1H NMR spectroscopy. The peptide adopts an alpha-helical structure in the presence of both SDS and 50% TFE. The lipid-bound structure of the peptide, generated from the NMR NOE data, showed an elongated, slightly curved alpha-helix. Despite its high alpha-helix forming propensity, the peptide requires alpha helix-promoting environment to adopt an alpha-helical structure. This indicates the importance of the surrounding chemical environment and implies that, in the absence of lipid, tertiary contacts in the folded protein play a role in maintaining its structural integrity. Furthermore, the data suggest that the amphipathic helix bundle organization serves as a prerequisite structural motif for the reversible lipoprotein-binding activity of M. sexta apoLp-III.  相似文献   

13.
To define the lipid and receptor binding regions of apolipoprotein E (apoE), we have synthesized four peptides beginning at residue 169 and continuing through the putative receptor binding region and ending at residue 129 so as to include a proposed lipid binding domain. The peptides were synthesized by solid-phase techniques, cleaved with anhydrous HF, and purified by ion-exchange and semipreparative reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The peptides had the correct amino acid composition and were greater than 99% pure by analytical reversed-phase HPLC. The circular dichroic spectrum of each peptide was recorded before and after mixing with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine. With apoE (148-169), apoE (144-169), and apoE (139-169), no changes were observed in the ellipticity at 222 nm. However, with apoE (129-169), an increase in alpha-helicity to approximately 42% was observed. Density gradient ultracentrifugation of the lipid-peptide mixture permitted isolation of a complex with apoE (129-169) with a molar ratio of lipid to peptide of 125:1, which was stable to recentrifugation. The alpha-helicity of the peptide in the complex was estimated to be 56%. No complexes were isolated from the gradients of the shorter peptides. Therefore, we conclude that the amphipathic helix formed by residues 130-150 contains one of the lipid binding regions of apoE.  相似文献   

14.
R Katakai  K Wanikawa  K Saga 《Biopolymers》1990,30(7-8):815-819
Liposomes consisting of egg yolk phosphatidylcholine and hydrophobic peptides Nps- and Cl-.+H2-(Met-Met-Leu)n-OEt (n = 6-10) with various polypeptide chain lengths were prepared by the sonication method. The conformation of the peptides incorporated into the liposomes was examined by CD spectroscopy. All the peptides incorporated assumed alpha-helical conformation. Quantitative analyses of the peptides and lipids in the membranes showed that the concentration of the peptides with a positive charge at the N-terminus in the liposomes decreased markedly as the peptide chain length increased, reaching zero for the peptides over n = 8. The peptides without a positive charge were hardly incorporated into the liposomes. Infrared attenuated reflection spectroscopy of multilayered membranes containing the peptides suggests that the axis of the alpha-helical peptide rods is oriented in parallel with the molecular axis of lipids in the membranes. These results suggest that the hydrophobic peptides can be incorporated into the lipid bilayers of the liposomes in the alpha-helical conformation, the rods of which have a length comparable to the thickness of the lipid bilayers, and the N-terminal positive charge of the peptides is essential for the stable peptide incorporated into the membranes.  相似文献   

15.
CRAMP was identified from a cDNA clone derived from mouse femoral marrow cells as a member of cathelicidin-derived antimicrobial peptides. This peptide shows potent antimicrobial activity against gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria but no hemolytic activity against human erythrocytes. CRAMP was known to cause rapid permeabilization of the inner membrane of Escherichia coli. In this study, the structure of CRAMP in TFE/H2O (1 : 1, v/v) solution was determined by CD and NMR spectroscopy. CD spectra showed that CRAMP adopts a mainly alpha-helical conformation in TFE/H2O solution, DPC micelles, SDS micelles and liposomes, whereas it has a random structure in aqueous solution. The tertiary structure of CRAMP in TFE/H2O (1 : 1, v/v), as determined by NMR spectroscopy, consists of two amphipathic alpha-helices from Leu4 to Lys10 and from Gly16 to Leu33. These two helices are connected by a flexible region from Gly11 to Gly16. Previous analysis of series of fragments composed of various portion of CRAMP revealed that an 18-residue fragment with the sequence from Gly16 to Leu33 was found to retain antibacterial activity. Therefore, the amphipathic alpha-helical region from Gly16 to Leu33 of CRAMP plays important roles in spanning the lipid bilayers as well as its antibiotic activity. Based on this structure, novel antibiotic peptides having strong antibiotic activity, with no hemolytic effect will be developed.  相似文献   

16.
Ion channel-forming peptides enable us to study the conformational dynamics of a transmembrane helix as a function of sequence and environment. Molecular dynamics simulations are used to study the conformation and dynamics of three 22-residue peptides derived from the second transmembrane domain of the glycine receptor (NK4-M2GlyR-p22). Simulations are performed on the peptide in four different environments: trifluoroethanol/water; SDS micelles; DPC micelles; and a DMPC bilayer. A hierarchy of alpha-helix stabilization between the different environments is observed such that TFE/water < micelles < bilayers. Local clustering of trifluoroethanol molecules around the peptide appears to help stabilize an alpha-helical conformation. Single (S22W) and double (S22W,T19R) substitutions at the C-terminus of NK4-M2GlyR-p22 help to stabilize a helical conformation in the micelle and bilayer environments. This correlates with the ability of the W22 and R19 side chains to form H-bonds with the headgroups of lipid or detergent molecules. This study provides a first atomic resolution comparison of the structure and dynamics of NK4-M2GlyR-p22 peptides in membrane and membrane-mimetic environments, paralleling NMR and functional studies of these peptides.  相似文献   

17.
Solid-phase syntheses of the hydrophobic peptides Neu(TM35) ((1)EQRASPVTFIIATVVGVLLFLILVVVVGILIKRRR(35)) and Neu*(TM35) ((1)EQRASPVTFIIATVEGVLLFLILVVVVGILIKRRR(35)), corresponding to the native and mutated (V15E) transmembrane domain of the neu/erbB-2 tyrosine kinase receptor, respectively, were accomplished using Fmoc chemistry. The use of a new resin and cleavage and purification conditions led to large increases in yields and peptide purity. Two (15)N-labelled versions of both wild type and mutated peptides were also synthesized. Approximately 20-40 mg of peptide was obtained using a small-scale synthesis, whereas ca 100 mg of pure peptide was collected on a medium scale. Peptide purity, as monitored by HPLC and mass spectrometry, ranged from 95 to 98% for the six peptides synthesized. Secondary structure as determined by UV circular dichroism (CD) in trifluoroethanol (TFE) showed ca 74% alpha-helical content for the native peptide and ca 63% for that bearing the mutation. Secondary structure of Neu(TM35) was retained in DMPC (dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine)/DCPC (dicaproylphosphatidylcholine) membrane bicelles, and evidences for dimers/oligomers in the lipid bilayer were found.  相似文献   

18.
The membrane lipid phase may be an important mediator of the peptide-receptor interaction. In order to understand the mechanism of this interaction, it is important to know the peptide structure, not only in the hydrophobic lipid bilayer environment, but also at the bilayer surface and in solution. To investigate this problem we have measured the secondary structure of the 11-residue neuropeptide substance P (SP) and its fragments in aqueous solutions, in membrane mimetic solvents, and associated with lipid bilayers using Raman and CD spectroscopy. Raman and CD spectra of SP bound to liposomes indicate a less than 20% helix content. We interpret these results to indicate that SP contains virtually no helix when bound to negatively charged liposomes. These spectra are similar to spectra of peptides in type I and III beta-turns. SP forms between 10 and 30% (1-3 residues) helical structure in sodium dodecyl sulfate micelles and less than 10% helix in methanol and trifluoroethanol. The binding of SP to negatively charged liposomes significantly changes the structure of the lipid acyl chains, decreasing order in some cases and increasing it in others. Raman spectra of SP in water indicates that SP near 30 mM forms an ensemble of structures in water that is distinct from completely unfolded peptide and from the aggregated beta-sheet form observed in saline solutions. We conclude from our CD results that methods used to quantitate secondary structure from CD spectra of short peptides cannot be used to distinguish between very short helical segments and beta-turns.  相似文献   

19.
A conformationally restricted analog of the N-terminal 12-residue peptide segment of the HA2 subunit of the PPV/34, PR/8/34, and Jap/57 strains of influenza virus hemagglutinin was synthesized containing three residues of Calpha-methyl-valine. This peptide has a higher content of helical structure in the presence of 50% trifluoroethanol or when interacting with liposomes of egg phosphatidylcholine compared with the conformationally more flexible control peptide with the native sequence. The control and analog peptides had opposite effects on membrane curvature as measured by shifts in the bilayer-to-hexagonal phase transition temperature of a synthetic phosphatidylethanolamine derivative. The control peptide promoted more negative curvature, particularly at acidic pH and was also more potent than the analog in promoting lipid mixing. The results indicate that the ability of the peptide to sample a broader range of conformations is required for the influenza fusion peptide to destabilize membranes and that a rigid helical structure is less fusogenic. The difference between the two peptides and between pH 7.4 and pH 5.0 show a correlation between the ability to promote negative curvature and to accelerate lipid mixing.  相似文献   

20.
The conformations of synthetic peptides Lys-Phe-Phe-Phe-Ile-Ile-Gly-Leu-Ile-Ile-Gly-Leu-Phe-OCH3 and Lys(epsilon-palmitoyl)-Phe-Phe-Phe-Ile-Ile-Gly-Leu-Ile-Ile-Gly-Leu-Phe-O CH3, which constitute a part of the membrane-spanning region of the vesicular stomatitis virus G protein, have been studied by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. Secondary structural features are observed for both peptides in trifluoroethanol, methanol, aqueous mixtures of trifluoroethanol and methanol and in a micellar environment. In trifluoroethanol, the CD spectra indicate the presence of a helical conformation, whereas in aqueous mixtures of organic solvents, both helical and beta-conformations are observed. While fatty acid acylation does not directly modulate peptide conformation, it promotes self-association of the acylated peptide and association with micelles. In a micellar environment, the acylated peptide adopts an alpha-helical conformation.  相似文献   

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