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1.
Caputo GA  London E 《Biochemistry》2004,43(27):8794-8806
The behavior of model-membrane-inserted polyLeu-rich peptides containing Asp residues located at various positions in their hydrophobic core was investigated. The topography of the bilayer-inserted alpha helices formed by these peptides was evaluated by measuring the emission lambda(max) and quenching the fluorescence of a Trp at the center of the peptide sequence. When Asp residues were protonated (at low pH), peptides that were incorporated into vesicles composed of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) adopted a topography in which the polyLeu sequence predominantly formed a normal transmembrane (TM) helix. When Asp residues were ionized (at neutral or high pH), topography was altered in a manner that would allow the charged Asp residues to reside near the bilayer surface. In DOPC vesicles, most peptides repositioned so that the longest segment of consecutive hydrophobic residues (12 residue minimum) formed a truncated/shifted TM structure. However, peptides with one or two charged Asp residues close to the center of the hydrophobic sequence and thus lacking even a 12-residue continuous hydrophobic segment, formed a helical non-TM state locating near the bilayer surface. At low pH, incorporation of the peptides into thicker bilayers composed of dierucoylphosphatidylcholine (DEuPC) resulted in the formation of a mixture of the normal TM state and the non-TM helical state located near the bilayer surface. In DEuPC vesicles at high pH, the non-TM state tended to predominate. How Asp-ionization-dependent shifts in helix topography may regulate the function of membrane proteins exposed to environments with differing pH in vivo (e.g., endosomes) is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The minimum hydrophobic length necessary to form a transmembrane (TM) helix in membranes was investigated using model membrane-inserted hydrophobic helices. The fluorescence of a Trp at the center of the sequence and its sensitivity to quenching were used to ascertain helix position within the membrane. Peptides with hydrophobic cores composed of poly(Leu) were compared to sequences containing a poly 1:1 Leu:Ala core (which have a hydrophobicity typical of natural TM helices). Studies varying bilayer width revealed that the poly(Leu) core peptides predominately formed a TM state when the bilayer width exceeded hydrophobic sequence length by (i.e. when negative mismatch was) up to ∼ 11-12 Å (e.g. the case of a 11-12 residue hydrophobic sequence in bilayers with a biologically relevant width, i.e. dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) bilayers), while poly(LeuAla) core peptides formed predominantly TM state with negative mismatch of up to 9 Å (a 13 residue hydrophobic sequence in DOPC bilayers). This indicates that minimum length necessary to form a predominating amount of a TM state (minimum TM length) is only modestly hydrophobicity-dependent for the sequences studied here, and a formula that defines the minimum TM length as a function of hydrophobicity for moderately-to-highly hydrophobic sequences was derived. The minimum length able to form a stable TM helix for alternating LeuAla sequences, and that for sequences with a Leu block followed by an Ala block, was similar, suggesting that a hydrophobicity gradient along the sequence may not be an important factor in TM stability. TM stability was also similar for sequences flanked by different charged ionizable residues (Lys, His, Asp). However, ionizable flanking residues destabilized the TM configuration much more when charged than when uncharged. The ability of short hydrophobic sequences to form TM helices in membranes in the presence of substantial negative mismatch implies that lipid bilayers have a considerable ability to adjust to negative mismatch, and that short TM helices may be more common than generally believed. Factors that modulate the ability of bilayers to adjust to mismatch may strongly affect the configuration of short hydrophobic helices.  相似文献   

3.
Ren J  Lew S  Wang J  London E 《Biochemistry》1999,38(18):5905-5912
We examined the effect of the length of the hydrophobic core of Lys-flanked poly(Leu) peptides on their behavior when inserted into model membranes. Peptide structure and membrane location were assessed by the fluorescence emission lambdamax of a Trp residue in the center of the peptide sequence, the quenching of Trp fluorescence by nitroxide-labeled lipids (parallax analysis), and circular dichroism. Peptides in which the hydrophobic core varied in length from 11 to 23 residues were found to be largely alpha-helical when inserted into the bilayer. In dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (diC18:1PC) bilayers, a peptide with a 19-residue hydrophobic core exhibited highly blue-shifted fluorescence, an indication of Trp location in a nonpolar environment, and quenching localized the Trp to the bilayer center, an indication of transmembrane structure. A peptide with an 11-residue hydrophobic core exhibited emission that was red-shifted, suggesting a more polar Trp environment, and quenching showed the Trp was significantly displaced from the bilayer center, indicating that this peptide formed a nontransmembranous structure. A peptide with a 23-residue hydrophobic core gave somewhat red-shifted fluorescence, but quenching demonstrated the Trp was still close to the bilayer center, consistent with a transmembrane structure. Analogous behavior was observed when the behavior of individual peptides was examined in model membranes with various bilayer widths. Other experiments demonstrated that in diC18:1PC bilayers the dilution of the membrane concentration of the peptide with a 23-residue hydrophobic core resulted in a blue shift of fluorescence, suggesting the red-shifted fluorescence at higher peptide concentrations was due to helix oligomerization. The intermolecular self-quenching of rhodamine observed when the peptide was rhodamine-labeled, and the concentration dependence of self-quenching, supported this conclusion. These studies indicate that the mismatch between helix length and bilayer width can control membrane location, orientation, and helix-helix interactions, and thus may mismatch control both membrane protein folding and the interactions between membrane proteins.  相似文献   

4.
R E Jacobs  S H White 《Biochemistry》1989,28(8):3421-3437
One method of obtaining useful information about the physical chemistry of peptide/bilayer interactions is to relate thermodynamic parameters of the interactions to structural parameters obtained by diffraction methods. We report here the results of the application of this approach to interactions of hydrophobic tripeptides of the form Ala-X-Ala-O-tert-butyl with lipid bilayers. The thermodynamic constants (delta Gt, delta Ht, and delta St) for the transfer of the tripeptides from water into DMPC vesicles were determined for X = Leu, Phe, and Trp and found to be consistent with those expected for hydrophobic interactions above the phase transition of DMPC. Combining these results with the earlier ones of Jacobs and White [(1986) Biochemistry 25, 2605-2612], the favorable free energies of transfer with different amino acids in the -X- position increase in the order Gly less than Ala less than Leu less than Phe less than Trp in agreement with the Nozaki and Tanford [(1971) J. Biol. Chem. 246, 2211-2217] hydrophobicity scale. Determination of the location of Ala-[2H5]Trp-Ala-O-tert-butyl in oriented DOPC bilayers by neutron diffraction shows that the most hydrophobic peptide of the series is confined to the bilayer headgroup/water region. Refinement of the diffraction measurements shows that only 13% of the tryptophan is associated with the hydrocarbon core. The distribution of the water tends to mirror that of the peptide. Unlike peptide-free bilayers, 5% of the water penetrates the hydrocarbon, which is about 100-fold greater than expected. A quantitative thermodynamic analysis of the interfacial binding of the peptides suggests that (1) the hydrophobic interactions are 60-70% complete upon binding at the bilayer interface, (2) the interface is likely to play an important role in helix formation and insertion, (3) the hydrogen bond status of amino acid side chains is crucial to insertion, and (4) an a priori lack of knowledge of the status of such bonds could limit the precision of hydrophobicity plots. We introduce an interfacial hydrophobicity scale, IFH(h), with a variable hydrogen bond parameter (h) that permits one to consider explicitly hydrogen bonding in transbilayer helix searches.  相似文献   

5.
Lew S  Ren J  London E 《Biochemistry》2000,39(32):9632-9640
To explore the influence of amino acid composition on the behavior of membrane-inserted alpha-helices, we examined the behavior of Lys-flanked polyleucyl (pLeu) helices containing a single polar/ionizable residue within their hydrophobic core. To evaluate the location of the helices within the membrane by fluorescence, each contained a Trp residue at the center of the sequence. When incorporated into dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) model membrane vesicles, pLeu helices with or without a single Ser, Asn, Lys, or Asp residue in the hydrophobic core maintained a transmembrane state (named the N state) at neutral and acidic pH. In this state, the central Trp exhibited highly blue-shifted fluorescence, and fluorescence quenching by nitroxide-labeled lipids showed it located at the bilayer center. A state in which Trp fluorescence red-shifted by several nanometers (named the B state) was observed above pH 10-11. B state formation appears to result from deprotonation of the flanking Lys residues. Despite the red shift in Trp emission, fluorescence quenching showed that in the B state the Trp at most is only slightly shallower than in the N state, suggesting the B state also is a transmembrane or near-transmembrane structure. The B state is characterized by increased helix oligomerization, as shown by the dependence of Trp lambda(max) on the concentration of the peptide within the bilayer at high pH. The pLeu peptide with a Asp residue in the core underwent a pH-dependent transition at a lower pH than the other peptides (pH 8-9). At high pH, it exhibited both a more highly red-shifted fluorescence and shallower Trp location than the other peptides. This state (named the S state) did not exhibit a concentration-dependent Trp lambda(max). We attribute S state behavior to the formation of a charged Asp residue at high pH, and a consequent movement of the Asp toward the membrane surface, resulting in the formation of a nontransmembrane state. We conclude that a polar or ionizable residue can readily be tolerated in a single transmembrane helix, but that the charges on ionizable residues in the core and regions flanking the helix significantly modulate the stability of transmembrane insertion and/or helix-helix association.  相似文献   

6.
Liu F  Lewis RN  Hodges RS  McElhaney RN 《Biochemistry》2002,41(29):9197-9207
High-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy were used to study the interaction of an alpha-helical transmembrane peptide, acetyl-Lys2-Leu24-Lys2-amide (L24), and odd-chain members of the homologous series of n-saturated diacylphosphatidylcholines. An analogue of L24, in which the lysine residues were all replaced by 2,3-diaminopropionic acid, and another, in which a leucine residue at each end of the polyLeu sequence was replaced by a tryptophan, were also studied. At low peptide concentrations, the DSC thermograms exhibited by these lipid/peptide mixtures are resolvable into two components. One of these components is fairly narrow, highly cooperative, and exhibits properties which are similar to but not identical with those of the pure lipid. In addition, the transition temperature and cooperativity of this component, and its fractional contribution to the total enthalpy change, decrease with an increase in peptide concentration, more or less independently of phospholipid acyl chain length. The other component is very broad and predominates at high peptide concentrations. These two components have been assigned to the chain-melting phase transitions of populations of peptide-poor and peptide-enriched lipid domains, respectively. Moreover, when the mean hydrophobic thickness of the PC bilayer is less than the peptide hydrophobic length, the peptide-associated lipid melts at higher temperatures than does the bulk lipid and vice versa. In addition, the chain-melting enthalpy of the broad endotherm does not decrease to zero even at high peptide concentrations, suggesting that these peptides reduce somewhat but do not abolish the cooperative gel/liquid-crystalline phase transition of the lipids with which it is in contact. Our DSC results indicate that the width of the broad phase transition observed at high peptide concentration is inversely but discontinuously related to hydrocarbon chain length. Our FTIR spectroscopic data indicate that these peptides form a very stable alpha-helix under all of our experimental conditions but that small distortions of their alpha-helical conformation are induced in response to mismatch between peptide hydrophobic length and gel-state bilayer hydrophobic thickness. We also present evidence that these distortions are localized to the N- and C-terminal regions of these peptides. Interestingly, replacing the terminal Lys residues of L24 by 2,3-diaminopropionic acid residues actually attenuates the hydrophobic mismatch effects of the peptide on the thermotropic phase behavior of the host PC bilayer, in contrast to the predictions of the snorkel hypothesis. We rationalize this attenuated hydrophobic mismatch effect by postulating that the 2,3-diaminopropionic acid residues are too short to engage in significant electrostatic and hydrogen-bonding interactions with the polar headgroups of the host phospholipid bilayer, even in the absence of any hydrophobic mismatch between incorporated peptide and the bilayer. Similarly, the reduced hydrophobic mismatch effect also observed when the two terminal Leu residues of L24 are replaced by Trp residues is rationalized by considering the lower energetic cost of exposing the Trp as opposed to the Leu residues to the aqueous phase in thin PC bilayers and the higher cost of inserting the Trp as opposed to the Leu residues into the hydrophobic cores of thick PC bilayers.  相似文献   

7.
To investigate the effect of lipid structure upon the membrane topography of hydrophobic helices, the behavior of hydrophobic peptides was studied in model membrane vesicles. To define topography, fluorescence and fluorescence quenching methods were used to determine the location of a Trp at the center of the hydrophobic sequence. For peptides with cationic residues flanking the hydrophobic sequence, the stability of the transmembrane (TM) configuration (relative to a membrane-bound non-TM state) increased as a function of lipid composition on the order: 1:1 (mol:mol) 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC):1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine ∼ 6:4 POPC:cholesterol < POPC ∼ dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) < 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-rac-(1-glycerol)] sodium salt (DOPG) ≤ 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-l-serine] sodium salt (DOPS), indicating that the anionic lipids DOPG and DOPS most strongly stabilized the TM configuration. TM stabilization was near maximal at 20-30 mol% anionic lipid, which are physiologically relevant values. TM stabilization by anionic lipid was observed for hydrophobic sequences with a diverse set of sequences (including polyAla), diverse lengths (from 12 to 22 residues), and various cationic flanking residues (H, R, or K), but not when the flanking residues were uncharged. TM stabilization by anionic lipid was also dependent on the number of cationic residues flanking the hydrophobic sequence, but was still significant with only one cationic residue flanking each end of the peptide. These observations are consistent with TM-stabilizing effects being electrostatic in origin. However, Trp located more deeply in DOPS vesicles relative to DOPG vesicles, and peptides in DOPS vesicles showed increased helix formation relative to DOPG and all other lipid compositions. These observations fit a model in which DOPS anchors flanking residues near the membrane surface more strongly than does DOPG and/or increases the stability of the TM state to a greater degree than DOPG. We conclude that anionic lipids can have significant and headgroup structure-specific effects upon membrane protein topography.  相似文献   

8.
The transferred nuclear Overhauser effects of yeast alpha-mating factor [(1-13)peptide] in the presence of various spin-labeled phosphatidylcholines in small unilamellar vesicles of perdeuterated phosphatidylcholine have been analyzed. From the analysis of the quenching effect by spin-labels, the depth of amino acid side chains of the mating factor in phospholipid bilayer has been elucidated. The Leu4 and Leu6 residues are buried deeply in the apolar region of the phospholipid bilayer while the hydrophilic residues such as Gln5 and Lys7 are in the shallow region of the bilayer. The interaction of the side chains of Trp1 and Trp3 residues of alpha-mating factor with the hydrophobic interior of the bilayer contributes to the binding of this peptide with the phosphatidylcholine bilayer. The conformation of des-Trp1-alpha-mating-factor [(2-13)peptide] in the membrane-bound state has been found to be similar to that of (1-13)peptide from the analysis of transferred nuclear Overhauser effects in the presence of mixed vesicles of perdeuterated phosphatidylcholine and perdeuterated phosphatidylserine. The incorporation of this acidic phospholipid in the vesicle remarkably enhances the binding of (1-13)peptide and analog peptides. However, such modifications that weaken the interaction with phospholipid bilayer (deletion of Trp1 and substitution of Trp3 by Gly or Ala) appreciably lower the physiological activity. Transferred nuclear Overhauser effect analyses have also been made of [DHis2]peptide, [DLeu6]peptide and [DLys7]peptide in the presence of the vesicles of perdeuterated phosphatidylcholine. The main-chain conformations of these three analogs in the membrane-bound state have been found to be similar to that of (1-13)peptide, although the side-chain conformations of the D-amino acid residues are naturally different from those of the L-amino acid ones. Thus, the physiological activities of the (1-13)peptide and a variety of analog peptides are found to correlate with the affinities to the phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine membrane and with the molecular conformations in the membrane-bound state.  相似文献   

9.
A novel mechanism for membrane modulation of transmembrane protein structure, and consequently function, is suggested in which mismatch between the hydrophobic surface of the protein and the hydrophobic interior of the lipid bilayer induces a flexing or bending of a transmembrane segment of the protein. Studies on model hydrophobic transmembrane peptides predict that helices tilt to submerge the hydrophobic surface within the lipid bilayer to satisfy the hydrophobic effect if the helix length exceeds the bilayer width. The hydrophobic surface of transmembrane helix 1 (TM1) of lactose permease, LacY, is accessible to the bilayer, and too long to be accommodated in the hydrophobic portion of a typical lipid bilayer if oriented perpendicular to the membrane surface. Hence, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data and molecular dynamics simulations show that TM1 from LacY may flex as well as tilt to satisfy the hydrophobic mismatch with the bilayer. In an analogous study of the hydrophobic mismatch of TM7 of bovine rhodopsin, similar flexing of the transmembrane segment near the conserved NPxxY sequence is observed. As a control, NMR data on TM5 of lacY, which is much shorter than TM1, show that TM5 is likely to tilt, but not flex, consistent with the close match between the extent of hydrophobic surface of the peptide and the hydrophobic thickness of the bilayer. These data suggest mechanisms by which the lipid bilayer in which the protein is embedded modulates conformation, and thus function, of integral membrane proteins through interactions with the hydrophobic transmembrane helices.  相似文献   

10.
Depth of bilayer penetration and effects on lipid mobility conferred by the membrane-active peptides magainin, melittin, and a hydrophobic helical sequence KKA(LA)7KK (denoted KAL), were investigated by colorimetric and time-resolved fluorescence techniques in biomimetic phospholipid/poly(diacetylene) vesicles. The experiments demonstrated that the extent of bilayer permeation and peptide localization within the membrane was dependent upon the bilayer composition, and that distinct dynamic modifications were induced by each peptide within the head-group environment of the phospholipids. Solvent relaxation, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy and fluorescence quenching analyses, employing probes at different locations within the bilayer, showed that magainin and melittin inserted close to the glycerol residues in bilayers incorporating negatively charged phospholipids, but predominant association at the lipid-water interface occurred in bilayers containing zwitterionic phospholipids. The fluorescence and colorimetric analyses also exposed the different permeation properties and distinct dynamic influence of the peptides: magainin exhibited the most pronounced interfacial attachment onto the vesicles, melittin penetrated more into the bilayers, while the KAL peptide inserted deepest into the hydrophobic core of the lipid assemblies. The solvent relaxation results suggest that decreasing the lipid fluidity might be an important initial factor contributing to the membrane activity of antimicrobial peptides.  相似文献   

11.
In this study, we investigated the extent to which different aromatic and positively charged side chains, which often flank transmembrane segments of proteins, can influence lipid-peptide interactions. Model systems consisting of phosphatidylcholine and hydrophobic alpha-helical peptides with different flanking residues were investigated. The peptides were incorporated in relatively thick and in relatively thin lipid bilayers to create a peptide-bilayer hydrophobic mismatch, and the compensating effects on lipid structure were analyzed. When relatively long with respect to the thickness of the bilayer, the peptides that are flanked by the aromatic side chains, Trp, Tyr, and Phe, all induce a significant ordering of the lipid acyl chains, while the peptides flanked by the charged residues Lys, Arg, and His do not. However, when the peptides are relatively short with respect to the thickness of the bilayer, their effect on lipid organization does not depend primarily on their aromatic or charged character. Peptides flanked by Trp, Tyr, Lys, or (at low pH) His residues are effective in inducing mismatch-relieving cubic and inverted hexagonal phases, while analogues flanked by Phe, Arg, or (at neutral pH) His residues cannot induce an inverted hexagonal phase. The different responses to mismatch might reflect the different interfacial affinities of the residues that were investigated.  相似文献   

12.
R E Jacobs  S H White 《Biochemistry》1986,25(9):2605-2612
The interactions of several members of a homologous series of peptides with the phospholipid bilayer have been examined by using fluorescence and deuterium NMR spectroscopy, differential scanning calorimetry, and measurements of water-to-bilayer partition coefficients. 1,2-Dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC) bilayers and tripeptides of the form Ala-X-Ala-O-tert-butyl are used as a model system to probe the influence of amino acid side-chain substitution on the insertion of peptides into membranes and the behavior of peptide/bilayer mixtures. Tripeptides with X = Gly, Ala, Phe, and Trp have been examined. All of the tripeptides are water soluble, and all partition into DMPC bilayer vesicles to some extent. The Gly-containing peptide is the least soluble and the Trp-containing peptide the most soluble in the bilayer. The extent of perturbation of the bilayer structure induced by the peptides parallels their bilayer solubility: the Gly and Ala peptides act as simple impurities while peptides containing bulky aromatic rings cause a phase separation. Changes in the fluorescence properties of the Trp analogue upon incorporation into the bilayer indicate that the Trp side chain is probably immersed in the hydrocarbon region of the bilayer. Peptides of this form should serve as easily modifiable model systems with which to examine details of how the bilayer environment affects peptide conformation, as well as how hydrophobic peptides affect the bilayer structure.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Caputo GA  London E 《Biochemistry》2003,42(11):3265-3274
A novel fluorescence method for determining the depth of Trp residues in membrane-inserted polypeptides is introduced. Quenching of Trp by acrylamide and 10-doxylnonadecane (10-DN) was used to measure Trp depth. Transmembrane helices with Trp residues at varying positions (and thus locating at different depths in lipid bilayers) were used to calibrate the method. It was found that acrylamide quenches Trp close to the bilayer surface more strongly than it quenches deeply buried Trp, while 10-DN quenches Trp close to the center of the bilayer more strongly than Trp close to the surface. The ratio of acrylamide quenching to that of 10-DN was found to be nearly linearly dependent on the depth of Trp in a membrane. It was also found that it was possible to detect coexisting shallowly and deeply inserted populations of Trp-containing polypeptides using these quenchers. In the presence of such mixed populations, acrylamide induced large blue shifts in fluorescence emission lambda(max) whereas 10-DN induced large red shifts. In a more homogeneous population quencher-induced shifts were found to be minimal. Dual quencher analysis can be used to distinguish hydrophobic helices with a transmembrane orientation from those located close to the bilayer surface and, when applied to a number of different peptides, revealed novel aspects of hydrophobic helix behavior.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of the hydrophobicity and the distribution of hydrophobic residues on the surfaces of some designed alpha-helical transmembrane peptides (acetyl-K2-L(m)-A(n)-K2-amide, where m + n = 24) on their solution behavior and interactions with phospholipids were examined. We find that although these peptides exhibit strong alpha-helix forming propensities in water, membrane-mimetic media, and lipid model membranes, the stability of the helices decreases as the Leu content decreases. Also, their binding to reversed phase high-performance liquid chromatography columns is largely determined by their hydrophobicity and generally decreases with decreases in the Leu/Ala ratio. However, the retention of these peptides by such columns is also affected by the distribution of hydrophobic residues on their helical surfaces, being further enhanced when peptide helical hydrophobic moments are increased by clustering hydrophobic residues on one side of the helix. This clustering of hydrophobic residues also increases peptide propensity for self-aggregation in aqueous media and enhances partitioning of the peptide into lipid bilayer membranes. We also find that the peptides LA3LA2 [acetyl-K2-(LAAALAA)3LAA-K2-amide] and particularly LA6 [acetyl-K2-(LAAAAAA)3LAA-K2-amide] associate less strongly with and perturb the thermotropic phase behavior of phosphatidylcholine bilayers much less than peptides with higher L/A ratios. These results are consistent with free energies calculated for the partitioning of these peptides between water and phospholipid bilayers, which suggest that LA3LA2 has an equal tendency to partition into water and into the hydrophobic core of phospholipid model membranes, whereas LA6 should strongly prefer the aqueous phase. We conclude that for alpha-helical peptides of this type, Leu/Ala ratios of greater than 7/17 are required for stable transmembrane associations with phospholipid bilayers.  相似文献   

16.
To gain insight into the parameters that determine the arrangement of proteins in membranes, (2)H NMR experiments were performed to analyze tilt and rotation angles of membrane-spanning alpha-helical model peptides upon incorporation in diacylphosphatidylcholine bilayers with varying thickness. The peptides consisted of the sequence acetyl-GW(2)(LA)(8)LW(2)A-NH(2) (WALP23) and analogues thereof, in which the interfacial Trp residues were replaced by Lys (KALP23) and/or the hydrophobic sequence was replaced by Leu (WLP23 and KLP23). The peptides were synthesized with a single deuterium-labeled alanine at four different positions along the hydrophobic segment. For all peptides a small but systematic increase in tilt angle was observed upon decreasing the bilayer thickness. However, significantly larger tilt angles were obtained for the Lys-flanked KALP23 than for the Trp-flanked WALP23, suggesting that interfacial anchoring interactions of Trp may inhibit tilting. Increasing the hydrophobicity resulted in an increase in tilt angle for the Trp-flanked analogue only. For all peptides the maximum tilt angle obtained was remarkably small (less than 12 degrees ), suggesting that further tilting is inhibited, most likely due to unfavorable packing of lipids around a tilted helix. The results furthermore showed that the direction of tilt is determined almost exclusively by the flanking residues: Trp- and Lys-flanked peptides were found to have very different rotation angles, which were influenced significantly neither by hydrophobicity of the peptides nor by the extent of hydrophobic mismatch. Finally, very small changes in the side chain angles of the deuterated alanine probes were observed in Trp-flanked peptides, suggesting that these peptides may decrease their hydrophobic length to help them to adapt to thin membranes.  相似文献   

17.
The extent of matching of membrane hydrophobic thickness with the hydrophobic length of transmembrane protein segments potentially constitutes a major director of membrane organization. Therefore, the extent of mismatch that can be compensated, and the types of membrane rearrangements that result, can provide valuable insight into membrane functionality. In the present study, a large family of synthetic peptides and lipids is used to investigate a range of mismatch situations. Peptide conformation, orientation, and extent of incorporation are assessed by infrared spectroscopy, tryptophan fluorescence, circular dichroism, and sucrose gradient centrifugation. It is shown that peptide backbone structure is not significantly affected by mismatch, even when the extent of mismatch is large. Instead, this study demonstrates that for tryptophan-flanked peptides the dominant response of a membrane to large mismatch is that the extent of incorporation is reduced, when the peptide is both too short and too long. With increasing mismatch, a smaller fraction of peptide is incorporated into the lipid bilayer, and a larger fraction is present in extramembranous aggregates. Relatively long peptides that remain incorporated in the bilayer have a small tilt angle with respect to the membrane normal. The observed effects depend on the nature of the flanking residues: long tryptophan-flanked peptides do not associate well with thin bilayers, while equisized lysine-flanked peptides associate completely, thus supporting the notion that tryptophan and lysine interact differently with membrane-water interfaces. The different properties that aromatic and charged flanking residues impart on transmembrane protein segments are discussed in relation to protein incorporation in biological systems.  相似文献   

18.
Synthetic model peptides have proven useful for examining fundamental peptide-lipid interactions. A frequently employed peptide design consists of a hydrophobic core of Leu-Ala residues with polar or aromatic amino acids flanking each side at the interfacial positions, which serve to "anchor" a specific transmembrane orientation. For example, WALP family peptides (acetyl-GWW(LA)(n)LWWA-[ethanol]amide), anchored by four Trp residues, have received particular attention in both experimental and theoretical studies. A recent modification proved successful in reducing the number of Trp anchors to only one near each end of the peptide. The resulting GWALP23 (acetyl-GGALW(5)(LA)(6)LW(19)LAGA-[ethanol]amide) displays reduced dynamics and greater sensitivity to lipid-peptide hydrophobic mismatch than traditional WALP peptides. We have further modified GWALP23 to incorporate a single tyrosine, replacing W(5) with Y(5). The resulting peptide, Y(5)GWALP23 (acetyl-GGALY(5)(LA)(6)LW(19)LAGA-amide), has a single Trp residue that is sensitive to fluorescence experiments. By incorporating specific (2)H and (15)N labels in the core sequence of Y(5)GWALP23, we were able to use solid-state NMR spectroscopy to examine the peptide orientation in hydrated lipid bilayer membranes. The peptide orients well in membranes and gives well-defined (2)H quadrupolar splittings and (15)N/(1)H dipolar couplings throughout the core helical sequence between the aromatic residues. The substitution of Y(5) for W(5) has remarkably little influence on the tilt or dynamics of GWALP23 in bilayer membranes of the phospholipids DOPC, DMPC, or DLPC. A second analogue of the peptide with one Trp and two Tyr anchors, Y(4,5)GWALP23, is generally less responsive to the bilayer thickness and exhibits lower apparent tilt angles with evidence of more extensive dynamics. In general, the peptide behavior with multiple Tyr anchors appears to be quite similar to the situation when multiple Trp anchors are present, as in the original WALP series of model peptides.  相似文献   

19.
Protein-lipid interaction and bilayer regulation of membrane protein functions are largely controlled by the hydrophobic match between the transmembrane (TM) domain of membrane proteins and the surrounding lipid bilayer. To systematically characterize responses of a TM helix and lipid adaptations to a hydrophobic mismatch, we have performed a total of 5.8-μs umbrella sampling simulations and calculated the potentials of mean force (PMFs) as a function of TM helix tilt angle under various mismatch conditions. Single-pass TM peptides called WALPn (n = 16, 19, 23, and 27) were used in two lipid bilayers with different hydrophobic thicknesses to consider hydrophobic mismatch caused by either the TM length or the bilayer thickness. In addition, different flanking residues, such as alanine, lysine, and arginine, instead of tryptophan in WALP23 were used to examine their influence. The PMFs, their decomposition, and trajectory analysis demonstrate that 1), tilting of a single-pass TM helix is the major response to a hydrophobic mismatch; 2), TM helix tilting up to ∼10° is inherent due to the intrinsic entropic contribution arising from helix precession around the membrane normal even under a negative mismatch; 3), the favorable helix-lipid interaction provides additional driving forces for TM helix tilting under a positive mismatch; 4), the minimum-PMF tilt angle is generally located where there is the hydrophobic match and little lipid perturbation; 5), TM helix rotation is dependent on the specific helix-lipid interaction; and 6), anchoring residues at the hydrophilic/hydrophobic interface can be an important determinant of TM helix orientation.  相似文献   

20.
Caveolin-1 has a segment of hydrophobic amino acids comprising approximately residues 103-122 that are anchored to the membrane with cholesterol-rich domains. Previously, we reported that changing the Pro(110) residue to Ala (the P110A mutant) prevents not only the localization of the protein into lipid rafts but also the formation and functioning of caveolae. The conformational state of caveolin-1 can be shifted toward the transmembrane arrangement by this single amino acid mutation. To model the conformation, and extent of membrane insertion of this segment into membrane-mimetic environments, we have prepared a peptide corresponding to this hydrophobic segment of caveolin-1 having the sequence KKKKLSTIFGIPMALIWGIYFAILKKKKK-amide and the mutated version, KKKKLSTIFGIAMALIWGIYFAILKKKKK-amide. These peptides contain flanking Lys residues to facilitate purification and handling of the peptide. Circular dichroism measurements demonstrated that the mutated peptide has increased helical content compared with the wild type both in the presence and absence of lipid. The fluorescence emission from the Trp residues in the peptide showed significant blue shifts in the presence of liposomes, however the presence of cholesterol in hydrated vesicle bilayers decreases its helical content. Our overall findings support our studies with the intact protein in cells and suggest that the peptide of WT caveolin-1 hydrophobic segment has an intrinsic preference not to maintain its conformation as a rigid transmembrane helix. Substituting the Pro residue with an Ala allows the peptide to exist in a more hydrophobic environment likely as a consequence of a change in its conformation to a straight hydrophobic helix that traverses the membrane.  相似文献   

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