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1.
The human, multifunctional peptide LL-37 causes membrane disruption by distinctly different mechanisms strongly dependent on the nature of the membrane lipid composition, varying not only with lipid headgroup charge but also with hydrocarbon chain length. Specifically, LL-37 induces a peptide-associated quasi-interdigitated phase in negatively charged phosphatidylglycerol (PG) model membranes, where the hydrocarbon chains are shielded from water by the peptide. In turn, LL-37 leads to a disintegration of the lamellar organization of zwitterionic dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) into disk-like micelles. Interestingly, interdigitation was also observed for the longer-chain C18 and C20 PCs. This dual behavior of LL-37 can be attributed to a balance between electrostatic interactions reflected in different penetration depths of the peptide and hydrocarbon chain length. Thus, our observations indicate that there is a tight coupling between the peptide properties and those of the lipid bilayer, which needs to be considered in studies of lipid/peptide interaction. Very similar effects were also observed for melittin and the frog skin peptide PGLa. Therefore, we propose a phase diagram showing different lipid/peptide arrangements as a function of hydrocarbon chain length and LL-37 concentration and suggest that this phase diagram is generally applicable to membrane-active peptides localized parallel to the membrane surface.  相似文献   

2.
Mechanism of lipid bilayer disruption by the human antimicrobial peptide,LL-37   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
LL-37 is an amphipathic, alpha-helical, antimicrobial peptide. (15)N chemical shift and (15)N dipolar-shift spectroscopy of site-specifically labeled LL-37 in oriented lipid bilayers indicate that the amphipathic helix is oriented parallel to the surface of the bilayer. This surface orientation is maintained in both anionic and zwitterionic bilayers and at different temperatures and peptide concentrations, ruling out a barrel-stave mechanism for bilayer disruption by LL-37. In contrast, electrostatic factors, the type of lipid, and the presence of cholesterol do affect the extent to which LL-37 perturbs the lipids in the bilayer as observed with (31)P NMR. The (31)P spectra also show that micelles or other small, rapidly tumbling membrane fragments are not formed in the presence of LL-37, excluding a detergent-like mechanism. LL-37 does increase the lamellar to inverted hexagonal phase transition temperature of both PE model lipid systems and Escherichia coli lipids, demonstrating that it induces positive curvature strain in these environments. These results support a toroidal pore mechanism of lipid bilayer disruption by LL-37.  相似文献   

3.
LL-37 is a cationic, amphipathic alpha-helical antimicrobial peptide found in humans that kills cells by disrupting the cell membrane. To disrupt membranes, antimicrobial peptides such as LL-37 must alter the hydrophobic core of the bilayer. Differential scanning calorimetry and deuterium ((2)H) NMR experiments on acyl chain perdeuterated lipids demonstrate that LL-37 inserts into the hydrophobic region of the bilayer and alters the chain packing and cooperativity. The results show that hydrophobic interactions between LL-37 and the hydrophobic acyl chains are as important for the ability of this peptide to disrupt lipid bilayers as its electrostatic interactions with the polar headgroups. The (2)H NMR data are consistent with the previously determined surface orientation of LL-37 (Henzler Wildman, K. A., et al. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 6545) with an estimated 5-6 A depth of penetration of the hydrophobic face of the amphipathic helix into the hydrophobic interior of the bilayer. LL-37 also alters the material properties of lipid bilayers, including the area per lipid, hydrophobic thickness, and coefficient of thermal expansion in a manner that varies with lipid type and temperature. Comparison of the effect of LL-37 on 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC-d(31)) and 1,2-dimyristoyl-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC-d(54)) at different temperatures demonstrates the importance of bilayer order in determining the type and extent of disordering and disruption of the hydrophobic core by LL-37. One possible explanation, which accounts for both the (2)H NMR data presented here and the known surface orientation of LL-37 under identical conditions, is that bilayer order influences the depth of insertion of LL-37 into the hydrophobic/hydrophilic interface of the bilayer, altering the balance of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions between the peptide and the lipids.  相似文献   

4.
As the main difference between bacterial and mammalian cell membranes is their net charge, the focal point of consideration in many model membrane experiments with antimicrobial peptides is lipid headgroup charge. We studied the interaction of the human multifunctional peptide LL-37 with single phospholipid monolayers, bilayers, and bilayers composed of binary mixtures of the four phospholipid species predominantly used in model membrane experiments (phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol, and phosphatidylserine). We found that 1), the effects on single lipid monolayers are not comparable to those on the corresponding bilayers; 2), there are four different effects of LL-37 on bilayers of the four lipids; 3), the preference of LL-37 for the specific lipids is roughly inversely related to chain packing density; and 4), in the binary lipid mixtures, one lipid—and not necessarily the charged one—generally governs the mode of lipid/peptide interaction. Thus, our results show that lipid net charge is not the decisive factor determining the membrane-perturbing mechanism of LL-37, but only one of several parameters, among them packing density, the ability to form intermolecular H-bonds, and lipid molecular shape, which emphasizes how profoundly the choice of the model system can influence the outcome of a study of lipid/peptide interaction.  相似文献   

5.
Pursuing the molecular mechanisms of the concentration dependent cytotoxic and hemolytic effects of the human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 on cells, we investigated the interactions of this peptide with lipids using different model membranes, together with fluorescence spectroscopy for the Trp-containing mutant LL-37(F27W). Minimum concentrations inhibiting bacterial growth and lipid interactions assessed by dynamic light scattering and monolayer penetration revealed the mutant to retain the characteristics of native LL-37. Although both LL-37 and the mutant intercalated effectively into zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine membranes the presence of acidic phospholipids caused augmented membrane binding. Interestingly, strongly attenuated intercalation of LL-37 into membranes containing both cholesterol and sphingomyelin (both at X=0.3) was observed. Accordingly, the distinction between target and host cells by LL-37 is likely to derive from i) acidic phospholipids causing enhanced association with the former cells as well as ii) from attenuated interactions with the outer surface of the plasma membrane of the peptide secreting host, imposed by its high content of cholesterol and sphingomyelin. Our results further suggest that LL-37 may exert its antimicrobial effects by compromising the membrane barrier properties of the target microbes by a mechanism involving cytotoxic oligomers, similarly to other peptides forming amyloid-like fibers in the presence of acidic phospholipids.  相似文献   

6.
Membrane disrupting antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are often amphipathic peptides that interact directly with lipid bilayers. AMPs are generally thought to interact mostly with lipid head groups, but it is less clear how the lipid alkyl chain length and saturation modulate interactions with membranes. Here, we used native mass spectrometry to measure the stoichiometry of three different AMPs—LL-37, indolicidin, and magainin-2—in lipid nanodiscs. We also measured the activity of these AMPs in unilamellar vesicle leakage assays. We found that LL-37 formed specific hexamer complexes but with different intermediates and affinities that depended on the bilayer thickness. LL-37 was also most active in lipid bilayers containing longer, unsaturated lipids. In contrast, indolicidin incorporated to a higher degree into more fluid lipid bilayers but was more active with bilayers with thinner, less fluid lipids. Finally, magainin-2 incorporated to a higher degree into bilayers with longer, unsaturated alkyl chains and showed more activity in these same conditions. Together, these data show that higher amounts of peptide incorporation generally led to higher activity and that AMPs tend to incorporate more into longer unsaturated lipid bilayers. However, the activity of AMPs was not always directly related to amount of peptide incorporated.  相似文献   

7.
The human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 permeabilizes the plasma membrane of host cells, but LL-37-induced direct effects on mitochondrial membrane permeability and function has not been reported. Here, we demonstrate that LL-37 is rapidly (within 20 min) internalized by human osteoblast-like MG63 cells, and that the peptide co-localizes with MitoTracker arguing for accumulation in mitochondria. Subcellular fractionation and Western blot disclose that stimulation with LL-37 (8 μM) for 2 h triggers release of the mitochondrial protein apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) to the cytosol, whereas LL-37 causes no release of cytochrome C oxidase subunit IV of the inner mitochondrial membrane, suggesting that LL-37 affects mitochondrial membrane permeability in a specific manner. Next, we investigated release of AIF and cytochrome C from isolated mitochondria by measuring immunoreactivity by dot blot. The media of mitochondria treated with LL-37 (8 μM) for 2 h contained 50% more AIF and three times more cytochrome C than that of control mitochondria, showing that LL-37 promotes release of both AIF and cytochrome C. Moreover, in vesicles reflecting mitochondrial membrane lipid composition, LL-37 stimulates membrane permeabilization and release of tracer molecules. We conclude that LL-37 is rapidly internalized by MG63 cells and accumulates in mitochondria, and that the peptide triggers release of pro-apoptotic AIF and directly affects mitochondrial membrane structural properties.  相似文献   

8.
Pursuing the molecular mechanisms of the concentration dependent cytotoxic and hemolytic effects of the human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 on cells, we investigated the interactions of this peptide with lipids using different model membranes, together with fluorescence spectroscopy for the Trp-containing mutant LL-37(F27W). Minimum concentrations inhibiting bacterial growth and lipid interactions assessed by dynamic light scattering and monolayer penetration revealed the mutant to retain the characteristics of native LL-37. Although both LL-37 and the mutant intercalated effectively into zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine membranes the presence of acidic phospholipids caused augmented membrane binding. Interestingly, strongly attenuated intercalation of LL-37 into membranes containing both cholesterol and sphingomyelin (both at X = 0.3) was observed. Accordingly, the distinction between target and host cells by LL-37 is likely to derive from i) acidic phospholipids causing enhanced association with the former cells as well as ii) from attenuated interactions with the outer surface of the plasma membrane of the peptide secreting host, imposed by its high content of cholesterol and sphingomyelin. Our results further suggest that LL-37 may exert its antimicrobial effects by compromising the membrane barrier properties of the target microbes by a mechanism involving cytotoxic oligomers, similarly to other peptides forming amyloid-like fibers in the presence of acidic phospholipids.  相似文献   

9.
Cheng XL  Tran QM  Foht PJ  Lewis RN  McElhaney RN 《Biochemistry》2002,41(27):8665-8671
Acholeplasma laidlawii B cells made fatty acid auxotrophic by growth in the presence of the biotin-binding agent avidin grow increasingly poorly at 37 degrees C when supplemented with single exogenous linear saturated fatty acids of decreasing hydrocarbon chain length. Interestingly, this progressive decrease in growth yields with decreasing hydrocarbon chain length is not observed when cells are cultured in the presence of other classes of exogenous fatty acids. Moreover, normal growth is observed is other types of fatty acids with equivalent or shorter hydrocarbon chain lengths, indicating that poor growth in the presence of short-chain linear saturated fatty acids cannot be due to a decrease in membrane lipid bilayer thickness per se. To understand the molecular basis of such growth inhibition, we determined the growth yields, membrane lipid fatty acid and polar headgroups compositions, and phase state and fluidity of the membrane lipids in cells progressively biosynthetically enriched in tridecanoic acid (13:0) or dodecanoic acid (12:0). The growth of fatty acid auxotrophic A. laidlawii B cells grown in the presence of binary combinations of an exogenous fatty acid which supports normal growth on its own and 13:0 or 12:0 revealed that growth inhibition is not observed until 13:0 and 12:0 biosynthetic incorporation levels reach about 90 and 60 mol %, respectively, after which growth is markedly inhibited. Differential scanning calorimetric analyses of membranes from cells maximally enriched in 13:0 indicate that the lipid gel/liquid-crystalline phase transition temperature is unexpectedly high but that at the growth temperature of 37 degrees C, the membrane lipid bilayer is almost exclusively in the liquid-crystalline state but is certainly not excessively fluid. However, high levels of 13:0 incorporation produce a greatly elevated level of the high melting, reversed nonlamellar phase-preferring lipid component monoglucosyl diacylglycerol, and greatly reduced levels of all other membrane lipid components. This marked elevation of monoglucosyl diacylglycerol levels can be rationalized as a regulatory response which maintains the lamellar/nonlamellar phase-forming propensity of the total membrane lipid mixture relatively constant in the face of the biosynthetic incorporation of increasing quantities of short-chain saturated fatty acids, which favor the lamellar phase. However, this lipid biosynthetic response produces a marked decline in the levels of anionic phospholipid and phosphoglycolipid which are probably required to maintain the minimal negative surface charge density of the lipid bilayer, which we suggest is responsible for the observed growth inhibition. This work shows that the lipid biosynthetic regulatory mechanisms present in this organism may sometimes operate at cross purposes such that it is not possible to simultaneously optimize all of the biologically relevant physical properties of the membrane lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction of surfactants with the vesicle membrane of the negatively charged lipid, dilauroylphosphatidic acid, was investigated through their effect on the gel-to-liquid-crystalline phase transition of the lipid bilayer. Three types of surfactants (anionic, cationic and non-ionic) with different hydrocarbon chain length were examined. (i) Anionic sodium alkylsulfates affected the phase transition temperature, Tm, only weakly. (ii) Non-ionic alkanoyl-N-methylglucamides decreased Tm monotonously with increasing concentration. The depression of Tm induced by these surfactants was analyzed by applying the van't Hoff model for the freezing-point depression, and the partition coefficients of the surfactants between bulk water and lipid membrane were estimated. (iii) Cationic alkyltrimethylammonium bromides affected Tm in a complex manner depending on the hydrocarbon chain length of the surfactants. Octyl-/tetradecyl-trimethylammonium bromide depressed/elevated Tm monotonously with increasing concentration, whereas the change in Tm induced by decyl- and dodecyltrimethylammonium bromides was not monotonous but biphasic. This complex behavior of the phase transition temperature was well explained, based on the statistical mechanical theory presented by Suezaki et al. (Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 818 (1985) 31-37), which takes into account the interaction between surfactant molecules incorporated in the lipid membrane.  相似文献   

11.
The human cathelicidin LL-37 displays both direct antibacterial activities and the capacity to modulate host-cell activities. These depend on structural characteristics that are subject to positive selection for variation, as observed in a previous analysis of the CAMP gene (encoding LL-37) in primates. The altered balance between cationic and anionic residues in different primate orthologues affects intramolecular salt-bridging and influences the stability of the helical conformation and tendency to aggregate in solution of the peptide. In the present study, we have analysed the effects of these structural variations on membrane interactions for human LL-37, rhesus RL-37 and orang-utan LL-37, using several complementary biophysical and biochemical methods. CD and ATR (attenuated total reflection)-FTIR (Fourier-transform IR) spectroscopy on model membranes indicate that RL-37, which is monomeric and unstructured in bulk solution [F-form (free form)], and human LL-37, which is partly structured and probably aggregated [A-form (aggregated form)], bind biological membranes in different manners. RL-37 may insert more deeply into the lipid bilayer than LL-37, which remains aggregated. AFM (atomic force microscopy) performed on the same supported bilayer as used for ATR-FTIR measurements suggests a carpet-like mode of permeabilization for RL37 and formation of more defined worm-holes for LL-37. Comparison of data from the biological activity on bacterial cells with permeabilization of model membranes indicates that the structure/aggregation state also affects the trajectory of the peptides from bulk solution through the outer cell-wall layers to the membrane. The results of the present study suggest that F-form cathelicidin orthologues may have evolved to have primarily a direct antimicrobial defensive capacity, whereas the A-forms have somewhat sacrificed this to gain host-cell modulating functions.  相似文献   

12.
High-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy were used to study the interaction of a synthetic alpha-helical hydrophobic transmembrane peptide, Acetyl-Lys2-Gly-Leu24-Lys2-Ala-Amide, and members of a homologous series of n-saturated diacylphosphatidylethanolamines (PEs). In the lower range of peptide mol fractions, the DSC endotherms exhibited by the lipid/peptide mixtures consist of two components. The temperature and cooperativity of the sharper, higher-temperature component are very similar to those of pure PE bilayers and are almost unaffected by variations in the peptide/lipid ratio. However, the fractional contribution of this component to the total enthalpy change decreases with increases in peptide concentration, and this component completely disappears at higher peptide mol fractions. The other component, which is less cooperative and occurs at a lower temperature, predominates at higher peptide concentrations. These two components of the DSC endotherm can be attributed to the chain-melting phase transitions of peptide-nonassociated and peptide-associated PE molecules, respectively. Although the temperature at which the peptide-associated PE molecules melt is progressively decreased by increases in peptide concentration, the magnitude of this shift is independent of the length of the PE hydrocarbon chain. In addition, the width of the phase transition observed at higher peptide concentrations is also relatively insensitive to PE hydrocarbon chain length, except that peptide gel-phase immiscibility occurs in very short- or very long-chain PE bilayers. Moreover, the enthalpy of the chain-melting transition of the peptide-associated PE does not decrease to 0 even at high peptide concentrations, suggesting that this peptide does not abolish the cooperative gel/liquid-crystalline phase transition of the lipids with which it is in contact. The FTIR spectroscopic data indicate that the peptide remains in a predominantly alpha-helical conformation, but that the peptide alpha-helix is subject to small distortions coincident with the changes in hydrophobic thickness that accompany the chain-melting phase transition of the PE bilayer. These data also indicate that the peptide significantly disorders the hydrocarbon chains of adjacent PE molecules in both the gel and liquid-crystalline states relatively independently of lipid hydrocarbon chain length. The relative independence of many aspects of PE-peptide interactions on the hydrophobic thickness of the host bilayer observed in the present study is in marked contrast to the results of our previous study of peptide-phosphatidylcholine (PC) model membranes (Zhang et al. (1992) Biochemistry 31:11579-11588), where strong hydrocarbon chain length-dependent effects were observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Using x-ray diffraction, solid-state 2H-NMR, differential scanning calorimetry, and dilatometry, we have observed a perturbation of saturated acyl chain phosphatidylglycerol bilayers by the antimicrobial peptide peptidyl-glycylleucine-carboxyamide (PGLa) that is dependent on the length of the hydrocarbon chain. In the gel phase, PGLa induces a quasi-interdigitated phase, previously reported also for other peptides, which is most pronounced for C18 phosphatidylglycerol. In the fluid phase, we found an increase of the membrane thickness and NMR order parameter for C14 and C16 phosphatidylglycerol bilayers, though not for C18. The data is best understood in terms of a close hydrophobic match between the C18 bilayer core and the peptide length when PGLa is inserted with its helical axis normal to the bilayer surface. The C16 acyl chains appear to stretch to accommodate PGLa, whereas tilting within the bilayer seems to be energetically favorable for the peptide when inserted into bilayers of C14 phosphatidylglycerol. In contrast to the commonly accepted membrane thinning effect of antimicrobial peptides, the data demonstrate that pore formation does not necessarily relate to changes in the overall bilayer structure.  相似文献   

14.
The phase stability of a fluid lipid layer that is a mixture of conventional monopolar lipids and C20 bipolar bolalipids was studied using a mean field theory that explicitly includes molecular details and configurational properties of the lipid molecules. The effect of changing the fraction of bolalipids, as well as the length of the hydrocarbon chain of the monopolar lipids, was probed. A phase separation between two liquid lipid phases was found when a mismatch exists in the optimal hydrophobic thicknesses of the pure bolalipid and monopolar lipid layers. The lipid mixture phase separates into a thin bolalipid-rich layer and a thicker monopolar-rich layer. The thin membrane phase is mainly composed of transmembrane bolalipid molecules whose polar heads are positioned at opposite membrane-water interfaces. In the monopolar lipid-rich phase, bolalipids are the minor component and most of them assume a looping configuration where both headgroups are present at the same membrane-water interface. For mixed layers that form a single lipid phase across all bolalipid concentrations, the hairpin-transmembrane ratio strongly depends on the hydrocarbon chain length of the monopolar lipid and the bolalipid concentration. The C-D bond order parameters of the different species have been calculated. Our findings suggest that the concentration-dependent phase transition should be experimentally observable by measuring of the order parameters through quadrupolar splitting experiments. The driving force for the phase separation in the monopolar lipid/bolalipid mixture is the packing mismatch between hydrophobic regions of the monopolar lipid hydrocarbon chains and the membrane-spanning bolalipid chains. The results from the molecular theory may be useful in the design of stable lipid layers for integral membrane protein sensing.  相似文献   

15.
As a key component of the innate immunity system, human cathelicidin LL-37 plays an essential role in protecting humans against infectious diseases. To elucidate the structural basis for its targeting bacterial membrane, we have determined the high quality structure of (13)C,(15)N-labeled LL-37 by three-dimensional triple-resonance NMR spectroscopy, because two-dimensional (1)H NMR did not provide sufficient spectral resolution. The structure of LL-37 in SDS micelles is composed of a curved amphipathic helix-bend-helix motif spanning residues 2-31 followed by a disordered C-terminal tail. The helical bend is located between residues Gly-14 and Glu-16. Similar chemical shifts and (15)N nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) patterns of the peptide in complex with dioctanoylphosphatidylglycerol (D8PG) micelles indicate a similar structure. The aromatic rings of Phe-5, Phe-6, Phe-17, and Phe-27 of LL-37, as well as arginines, showed intermolecular NOE cross-peaks with D8PG, providing direct evidence for the association of the entire amphipathic helix with anionic lipid micelles. The structure of LL-37 serves as a model for understanding the structure and function relationship of homologous primate cathelicidins. Using synthetic peptides, we also identified the smallest antibacterial peptide KR-12 corresponding to residues 18-29 of LL-37. Importantly, KR-12 displayed a selective toxic effect on bacteria but not human cells. NMR structural analysis revealed a short three-turn amphipathic helix rich in positively charged side chains, allowing for effective competition for anionic phosphatidylglycerols in bacterial membranes. KR-12 may be a useful peptide template for developing novel antimicrobial agents of therapeutic use.  相似文献   

16.
High-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy were used to study the interaction of a synthetic model hydrophobic peptide, Lys2-Gly-Leu24-Lys2-Ala-amide, and members of the homologous series of n-saturated diacylphosphatidylcholines. In the low range of peptide mole fractions, the DSC thermograms exhibited by the 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 fractional contribution of this component to the total enthalpy change, the peak transition temperature, and cooperativity decrease with an increase in peptide concentration, more or less independently of acyl chain length. The other component is very broad and predominates in the high range of peptide concentration. These two components have been assigned to the chain-melting phase transitions of populations of bulk lipid and peptide-associated lipid, 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 this peptide reduces 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 phase transition observed at high peptide concentration is inversely but discontinuously related to hydrocarbon chain length and that gel phase immiscibility occurs when the hydrophobic thickness of the bilayer greatly exceeds the hydrophobic length of the peptide. The FTIR spectroscopic data indicate that the peptide forms a very stable alpha-helix under all of our experimental conditions but that small distortions of its alpha-helical conformation are induced in response to any mismatch between peptide hydrophobic length and bilayer hydrophobic thickness. These results also indicate that the peptide alters the conformational disposition of the acyl chains in contact with it and that the resultant conformational changes in the lipid hydrocarbon chains tend to minimize the extent of mismatch of peptide hydrophobic length and bilayer hydrophobic thickness.  相似文献   

17.
A partial phase diagram of the system N,N-dimethyldodecylamine oxide (DDAO)/water/gramicidin D was determined by 2H-NMR. Both 2H2O and perdeuterated DDAO (DDAO-d31) were studied by solid state NMR techniques. Addition of gramicidin D to the micellar (L1), normal hexagonal (HI) and cubic (I) phases of DDAO induces phase separations, giving two-phase regions, which all contain a lamellar (L alpha) phase. The L alpha phase containing gramicidin is characterized by larger order parameters for DDAO-d31 compared with the corresponding order parameters in the L alpha and HI phases of DDAO-d31/H2O. The L alpha phase may stay in equilibrium with any other phase in the phase diagram. The DDAO exchange between the coexisting phases is slow on the NMR timescale, which is why the recorded NMR spectrum consists of superimposed spectra from the different phases occurring in the sample. Gramicidin D can be solubilized in appreciable quantities only in the lamellar phase of DDAO-d31. Increasing amounts of gramicidin in the liquid crystalline phases result in a continuous increase in the molecular ordering up to about 5 mol% gramicidin, where a plateau is reached. This is consistent with a recent theoretical model describing the influence on the ordering of lipids by a membrane protein with larger hydrophobic thickness than the lipid bilayer. The solvent used for dissolving gramicidin at the incorporation of the peptide in the lipid aggregates has no effect on the 2H-NMR lineshapes of DDAO-d31. It is concluded that gramicidin is solubilized in the L alpha phase and that it always adopts the channel conformation independent of a particular solvent. The channel conformation is also supported by CD studies. In some of the samples, macroscopic orientation of the lipid aggregates is observed. It is concluded that DDAO-d31 in the binary system favors an orientation with the long axis of the hydrocarbon chain perpendicular to the magnetic field, whereas when gramicidin D is present the hydrocarbon chain orients parallel to the magnetic field. This is explained by the fact that gramicidin aligns with its helical axis parallel to the magnetic field, thereby forcing also the DDAO-d31 molecules to obtain such an orientation.  相似文献   

18.
We have studied the biosynthetic regulation of the membrane lipid polar headgroup distribution in Acholeplasma laidlawii B cells made fatty acid auxotrophic by growth in the presence of the biotin-binding agent avidin to test whether this organism has the ability to coherently regulate the lamellar/nonlamellar phase propensity of its membrane lipids. The addition of various single normal growth-supporting exogenous fatty acids to such cell cultures produces fatty acid-homogeneous cells in which the hydrocarbon chain length and structure of the fatty acyl chains of the membrane lipids can be independently varied. Moreover, in analyzing our results, we consider the fact that the individual membrane lipid classes of this organism can form either normal micellar, lamellar, or reversed cubic or hexagonal phases in isolation (Lewis, R. N. A. H., and McElhaney, R. N. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 13818-13824). When A. laidlawii cells are highly enriched in one of a homologous series of methyl isobranched, methyl anteisobranched, or omega-cyclohexyl fatty acids, neither the ratio of normal micellar/lamellar nor of inverted cubic or hexagonal/lamellar phase-forming lipids are coherently regulated, and in fact in the former case, the changes in lipid polar headgroup composition observed are generally in a direction opposite to that required to maintain the overall lamellar/nonlamellar phase preference of the total membrane lipids constant when hydrocarbon chain length is varied. Similarly, when lipid hydrocarbon structure is varied at a constant effective chain length, a similar lack of coherent regulation of membrane lipid polar headgroup distribution is also observed, although in this case a weak overall trend in the expected direction occurs. We also confirm our previous finding (Foht, P. J., Tran, Q. M., Lewis, R. N. A. H., and McElhaney, R. N. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 13811-13817) that the ratio of inverted phase-forming monoglucosyl diacylglycerol to the lamellar phase-forming glycolipid diglucosyl diacylglycerol, previously used to estimate membrane lipid phase preference in A. laidlawii A and B, is not by itself a reliable indicator of the overall lamellar/nonlamellar phase propensity of the total membrane lipids of these organisms. Our results indicate that A. laidlawii B lacks a coherent mechanism to biosynthetically regulate the polar headgroup distribution of its membrane lipids to maintain the micellar/lamellar/inverted phase propensity constant in the face of induced variations in either the chain length or the structure of its lipid hydrocarbon chains. Finally, we suggest that the lack of a coherent regulatory mechanism to regulate the overall phase-forming propensity of the total membrane lipids of this organism under these circumstances may result in part from its inability to optimize all of the biologically relevant physical properties of its membrane lipid bilayer simultaneously.  相似文献   

19.
Legionella micdadei is responsible for community- or nosocomial-acquired pneumonia as well as the influenza-like illness Pontiac fever. The aim of this study was to investigate the ability of L. micdadei to utilize extracellular choline for phosphatidylcholine (PC) synthesis and its consequences for the phospholipid composition of its membrane system and the interaction with the human LL-37 peptide. Comparative analysis of the PC content using isotopic labeling revealed that in presence of exogenous choline 98% of the total PC was synthesized via the Pcs pathway while the remaining 2% were generated via the PE-methylation (PmtA) pathway. PC species were to a greater extent defined by the Pcs pathway in the outer membrane than in the inner membrane. While no major changes in the bacterial lipid content were observed using 31P NMR, indication for utilization of longer acyl chains and slight increase of PG in response to choline addition was observed by a top-down lipidomics screen. The LL-37 peptide inhibited L. micdadei growth in a dose-dependent manner. Bacteria cultured with exogenous choline were more sensitive to the LL-37 peptide when compared to the standard culture condition. Our biophysical investigations show that the peptide perturbs bacterial-derived phospholipid monolayers and this interaction is dependent on the molar portion of PC. This interaction is responsible for the observed changes in the anti-L. micdadei activity of the LL-37 peptide.  相似文献   

20.
Lipid A structure at the air-aqueous interface has been studied using pressure-area isotherm methods coupled with the surface X-ray scattering techniques of X-ray reflectivity (XR) and grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD). Lipid A monolayers were formed at the air-aqueous interface to represent the lipid moiety of the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. Lipid A structure was characterized at surface pressures between 10 and 35 mN/m. Interactions of α-helical antimicrobial peptides LL-37, SMAP-29 and D2A22 with lipid A monolayers were subsequently studied. Although insertion into the lipid A monolayers was observed with the α-helical peptides, little change was seen from the X-ray data, suggesting that the lipid A hydrocarbon chains are involved in reorientation during insertion and that the hydrocarbon chains have a relatively rigid structure.  相似文献   

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