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1.
The effect of sphingomyelin (SM), one of the main lipids in the external monolayer of erythrocyte plasma membrane, on the ability of the hemolytic peptide melittin to permeabilize liposomes was investigated. The peptide induced contents efflux in large unilamellar vesicles (LUV) composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC)/SM (1:1 mole ratio), at lower (>1:10,000) peptide-to-lipid mole ratios than in pure POPC (>1:1000) or POPC/1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylglycerol (POPG) (1:1 mole ratio) (>1:300) vesicles. Analysis of the leakage data according to a kinetic model of pore formation showed a good fit for hexameric-octameric pores in SM-containing vesicles, whereas mediocre fits and lower surface aggregation constants were obtained in POPC and POPC/POPG vesicles. Disturbance of lateral separation into solid (s(o)) and liquid-disordered (l(d)) phases in POPC/SM mixtures increased the peptide-dose requirements for leakage. Inclusion of cholesterol (Chol) in POPC/SM mixtures under conditions inducing lateral separation of lipids into liquid-ordered (l(o)) and l(d) phases did not alter the number of melittin peptides required to permeabilize a single vesicle, but increased surface aggregation reversibility. Partitioning into liposomes or insertion into lipid monolayers was not affected by the presence of SM, suggesting that: (i) melittin accumulated at comparable doses in membranes with different SM content, and (ii) differences in leakage were due to promotion of melittin transmembrane pores under coexistence of s(o)-l(d) and l(o)-l(d) phases. Our results support the notion that SM may regulate the stability of size-defined melittin pores in natural membranes.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of sphingomyelin (SM), one of the main lipids in the external monolayer of erythrocyte plasma membrane, on the ability of the hemolytic peptide melittin to permeabilize liposomes was investigated. The peptide induced contents efflux in large unilamellar vesicles (LUV) composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC)/SM (1:1 mole ratio), at lower (>1:10,000) peptide-to-lipid mole ratios than in pure POPC (>1:1000) or POPC/1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylglycerol (POPG) (1:1 mole ratio) (>1:300) vesicles. Analysis of the leakage data according to a kinetic model of pore formation showed a good fit for hexameric-octameric pores in SM-containing vesicles, whereas mediocre fits and lower surface aggregation constants were obtained in POPC and POPC/POPG vesicles. Disturbance of lateral separation into solid (so) and liquid-disordered (ld) phases in POPC/SM mixtures increased the peptide-dose requirements for leakage. Inclusion of cholesterol (Chol) in POPC/SM mixtures under conditions inducing lateral separation of lipids into liquid-ordered (lo) and ld phases did not alter the number of melittin peptides required to permeabilize a single vesicle, but increased surface aggregation reversibility. Partitioning into liposomes or insertion into lipid monolayers was not affected by the presence of SM, suggesting that: (i) melittin accumulated at comparable doses in membranes with different SM content, and (ii) differences in leakage were due to promotion of melittin transmembrane pores under coexistence of so-ld and lo-ld phases. Our results support the notion that SM may regulate the stability of size-defined melittin pores in natural membranes.  相似文献   

3.
A remarkable group of proteins challenge the notions that protein sequence determines a unique three-dimensional structure, and that membrane and soluble proteins are very distinct. The pore-forming toxins typically transform from soluble, monomeric proteins to oligomers that form transmembrane channels. Recent structural studies provide ideas about how these changes take place. The recently solved structures of the beta-pore-forming toxins LukS, varepsilon-toxin and intermedilysin confirm that the pore-forming regions are initially folded up on the surfaces of the soluble precursors. To create the transmembrane pores, these regions must extend and refold into membrane-inserted beta-barrels.  相似文献   

4.
We have investigated the permeabilization of POPC unilamellar vesicle bilayers upon the addition of melittin. This process was measured in an early time range of a few minutes by means of monitoring the release of an entrapped marker, the self-quenching fluorescent dye carboxyfluorescein. Pore formation is indicated by an apparent 'all-or-none' efflux out of individual vesicles and a higher than linear dependence on melittin concentration. Applying a recently developed evaluation procedure, the data are readily converted into the gross number of pores per vesicle formed within the elapsed measuring time t. The results can be generally described in terms of a fast initial rate of pore formation that slows down to a much lower value after a period of about 1 to 2 minutes, following a single exponential time course. The three rate parameters involved are shown to be power functions of the concentration of melittin that is actually associated with the vesicle membrane. These findings are in excellent quantitative agreement with a proposed scheme of reaction steps where the formation of lipid associated peptide dimers becomes rate determining once an initial fast deposit is exhausted.  相似文献   

5.
Many toxins and antimicrobial peptides permeabilize membrane vesicles by forming multimeric pores. Determination of the size of such pores is an important first step for understanding their structure and the mechanism of their self-assembly. We report a simple method for sizing pores in vesicles based on the differential release of co-encapsulated fluorescently labeled dextran markers of two different sizes. The method was tested using the bee venom peptide melittin, which was found to form pores of 25-30 A diameter in palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC) vesicles at a lipid-to-peptide ratio of 50. This result is consistent with observations on melittin pore formation in erythrocytes (Katsu, T., C. Ninomiya, M. Kuroko, H. Kobayashi, T. Hirota, and Y. Fujita 1988. Action mechanism of amphipathic peptides gramicidin S and melittin on erythrocyte membrane Biochim. Biophys. Acta. 939:57-63).  相似文献   

6.
Understanding the molecular mechanism underlying pore formation in lipid membranes by antimicrobial peptides is of great importance in biological sciences as well as in drug design applications. Melittin has been widely studied as a pore forming peptide, though the molecular mechanism for pore formation is still illusive. We examined the free energy barrier for the creation of a pore in lipid membranes with and without multiple melittin peptides. It was found that six melittin peptides significantly stabilized a pore, though a small barrier (a few kBT) for the formation still existed. With five melittin peptides or fewer, the pore formation barrier was much higher, though the established pore was in a local energy minimum. Although seven melittins effectively reduced the free energy barrier, a single melittin peptide left the pore after a long time MD simulation probably because of the overcrowded environment around the bilayer pore. Thus, it is highly selective for the number of melittin peptides to stabilize the membrane pore, as was also suggested by the line tension evaluations. The free energy cost required to insert a single melittin into the membrane is too high to explain the one-by-one insertion mechanism for pore formation, which also supports the collective melittin mechanism for pore formation.  相似文献   

7.
The cytotoxic peptide from honeybee venom, melittin, and a synthetic peptide analogue of it lyse human erythrocytes in a biphasic process. The kinetics of the lysis in 0.30 M sucrose, 0.01 M sodium phosphate, pH 7.30 at 4 degrees C were investigated. Our results show that melittin rapidly binds to the outer surface of the erythrocyte membrane, and the surface-bound monomers produce transient openings through which approximately 40 hemoglobin molecules can escape. Concomitantly, the melittin loses its ability to effect the process, presumably by translocation through the bilayer. The half-life for this process is 1.2 min. In a much slower process, dimers of this internalized melittin again produce transient membrane openings in a steady state. On a molar basis, the synthetic peptide analogue produces a fast process comparable to that caused by melittin, but is more efficient in the slow phase. Escape of hemoglobin and of carbonic anhydrase through the openings is diffusion controlled. These results suggest that the functional units necessary for the activity of melittin-like cytotoxic peptides are a 20 amino acid amphiphilic alpha-helix with a hydrophobic:hydrophilic ratio greater than 1 and a short segment with a high concentration of positive charges.  相似文献   

8.
We studied the effects of melittin on various cell wall components and vesicles of various lipid compositions. To interact with the cytoplasmic membrane, melittin must traverse the cell wall, which is composed of oligosaccharides. Here, we found that melittin had a strong affinity for chitin, peptidoglycan, and lipopolysaccharide. We further examined the influence of lipid compositions on the lysis of the membranes by melittin. The result showed that melittin bound better to negatively charged than to zwitterionic lipid vesicles but was more potent at inducing leakage from zwitterionic lipid vesicles. Our studies further indicated that the oligomeric state of melittin varied between tetramers and octamers during the formation of toroidal pores. Dextran leakage experiments confirmed the formation and dimension of these toroidal pores. Finally, transmission electron microscopy revealed that melittin formed pores via peptide oligomerization by the toroidal pore-forming mechanism. The toroidal pores composed of 7-8 nm diameter rings that encircled 3.5-4.5 nm diameter cavities on zwitterionic lipid vesicles.  相似文献   

9.
This work presents a comparative study of proton transfer activity (PTA) of two cationic (+6) antimicrobial peptides, β‐structural arenicin‐2 and α‐helical melittin. A new approach was proposed for the detection of passive proton transfer by using proteoliposomes containing bacteriorhodopsin, which creates a small light‐induced electrochemical proton gradient ?ΔpH. Addition of several nanomoles of the peptides lowers ?ΔpH that is proximately indicative of the pore formation. The quantitative analysis of sigmoidal dependences of ?pH on the peptides concentration was carried out using liposomes prepared from PC, PC/PE, PC/PE/PI and PC/PG. Substitution of PC‐containing liposomes with PE‐containing ones, having negative spontaneous curvature, reduced the PTA of α‐helical melittin and increased that of β‐structural arenicin‐2. This result indicates an essential difference in the pore formation by these peptides. Further increase of PTA in response to arenicin‐2 (in contrast to melittin) was observed in the liposomes prepared from PC/PE/PI. The data analysis leads to the conclusion that PTA is influenced by (i) efficiency of the pore assemblage, which depends on the structure of pore‐forming peptides, and the spontaneous curvature of lipids and (ii) the presence of mobile protons in the polar head groups of phospholipids. Copyright © 2014 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

10.
Bacteriocins: mechanism of membrane insertion and pore formation   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Lactic acid bacteria produce several types of pore forming peptides. Class I bacteriocins are lantibiotics that contain (methyl)lanthionine residues that may form intramolecular thioether rings. These peptides generally have a broad spectrum of activity and form unstable pores. Class II bacteriocins are small, heat stable peptides mostly with a narrow spectrum of activity. Most bacteriocins interact with anionic lipids that are abundantly present in the membranes of Gram-positive bacteria.'Docking molecules' may enhance the conductivity and stability of lantibiotic pores, while'receptors' in the target membrane may determine specificity of class II bacteriocins. Insertion into the membrane of many bacteriocins is proton motive force driven. Lantibiotics may form pores according to a'wedge-like' model, while class II bacteriocins may enhance membrane permeability either by the formation of a'barrel stave' pore or by a'carpet' mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
Pyroptosis is a lytic type of cell death that is initiated by inflammatory caspases. These caspases are activated within multi‐protein inflammasome complexes that assemble in response to pathogens and endogenous danger signals. Pyroptotic cell death has been proposed to proceed via the formation of a plasma membrane pore, but the underlying molecular mechanism has remained unclear. Recently, gasdermin D (GSDMD), a member of the ill‐characterized gasdermin protein family, was identified as a caspase substrate and an essential mediator of pyroptosis. GSDMD is thus a candidate for pyroptotic pore formation. Here, we characterize GSDMD function in live cells and in vitro. We show that the N‐terminal fragment of caspase‐1‐cleaved GSDMD rapidly targets the membrane fraction of macrophages and that it induces the formation of a plasma membrane pore. In vitro, the N‐terminal fragment of caspase‐1‐cleaved recombinant GSDMD tightly binds liposomes and forms large permeability pores. Visualization of liposome‐inserted GSDMD at nanometer resolution by cryo‐electron and atomic force microscopy shows circular pores with variable ring diameters around 20 nm. Overall, these data demonstrate that GSDMD is the direct and final executor of pyroptotic cell death.  相似文献   

12.
Insights into the protein-membrane interactions by which the C-terminal pore-forming domain of colicins inserts into membranes and forms voltage-gated channels, and the nature of the colicin channel, are provided by data on: (i) the flexible helix-elongated state of the colicin pore-forming domain in the fluid anionic membrane interfacial layer, the optimum anionic surface charge for channel formation, and voltage-gated translocation of charged regions of the colicin domain across the membrane; (ii) structure-function data on the voltage-gated K(+) channel showing translocation of an arginine-rich helical segment through the membrane; (iii) toroidal channels formed by small peptides that involve local participation of anionic lipids in an inverted phase. It is proposed that translocation of the colicin across the membrane occurs through minimization of the Born charging energy for translocation of positively charged basic residues across the lipid bilayer by neutralization with anionic lipid head groups. The resulting pore structure may consist of somewhat short, ca. 16 residues, trans-membrane helices, in a locally thinned membrane, together with surface elements of inverted phase lipid micelles.  相似文献   

13.
Equinatoxin II is a representative of actinoporins, eukaryotic pore-forming toxins from sea anemones. It creates pores in natural and artificial lipid membranes by an association of three or four monomers. Cysteine-scanning mutagenesis was used to study the structure of the N terminus, which is proposed to be crucial in transmembrane pore formation. We provide data for two steps of pore formation: a lipid-bound monomeric intermediate state and a final oligomeric pore. Results show that residues 10-28 are organized as an alpha-helix in both steps. In the first step, the whole region is transferred to a lipid-water interface, laying flat on the membrane. In the pore-forming state, the hydrophilic side of the amphipathic helix lines the pore lumen. The pore has a restriction around Asp-10, according to the permeabilization ratio of ions flowing through pores formed by chemically modified mutants. A general model was introduced to derive the tilt angle of the helix from the ion current data. This study reveals that actinoporins use a unique single helix insertion mechanism for pore formation.  相似文献   

14.
蜂毒溶血肽作用机理研究进展   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
该文系统归纳了蜂毒溶血肽的生物学功能,分子结构与性质,溶解血细胞的机理,以及溶血和抑菌活性与结构的关系, 并结合本实验室研究着重综述了近年来国内外对蜂毒溶血肽作用机理的研究。 提出今后研究应该向定量化方向发展,应用计算技术深入阐明蜂毒肽作用的动力学过程及结构与功能的关系,为今后指导分子设计打下一定的理论基础。  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.
Chen FY  Lee MT  Huang HW 《Biophysical journal》2003,84(6):3751-3758
Antimicrobial peptides have two binding states in a lipid bilayer, a surface state S and a pore-forming state I. The transition from the S state to the I state has a sigmoidal peptide-concentration dependence indicating cooperativity in the peptide-membrane interactions. In a previous paper, we reported the transition of alamethicin measured in three bilayer conditions. The data were explained by a free energy that took into account the membrane thinning effect induced by the peptides. In this paper, the full implications of the free energy were tested by including another type of peptide, melittin, that forms toroidal pores, instead of barrel-stave pores as in the case of alamethicin. The S-to-I transitions were measured by oriented circular dichroism. The membrane thinning effect was measured by x-ray diffraction. All data were in good agreement with the theory, indicating that the membrane thinning effect is a plausible mechanism for the peptide-induced pore formations.  相似文献   

18.
Pore formation and translocation of melittin.   总被引:8,自引:2,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
Melittin, a bee venom, is a basic amphiphilic peptide, which mainly acts on the lipid matrix of membranes, lysing various cells. To elucidate the molecular mechanism, we investigated its interactions with phospholipid vesicles. The peptide formed a pore with a short lifetime in the membrane, as revealed by the release of an anionic fluorescent dye, calcein, from the liposomes. Our new double-labeling method clarified that the pore size increased with the peptide-to-lipid ratio. Upon the disintegration of the pore, a fraction of the peptides translocated across the bilayer. The pore formation was coupled with the translocation, which was proved by three fluorescence experiments recently developed by our laboratory. A novel model for the melittin pore formation was discussed in comparison with other pore-forming peptides.  相似文献   

19.
Alcohols denature the native state of proteins, and also stabilize the alpha-helical conformation in unfolded proteins and peptides. Among various alcohols, trifluoroethanol (TFE) and hexafluoroisopropanol (HFIP) are often used because of their high potential to induce such effects. However, the reason why TFE and HFIP are more effective than other alcohols is unknown. Using CD, we studied the effects of TFE and HFIP as well as reference alcohols, i.e., methanol, ethanol, and isopropanol, on the conformation of bovine beta-lactoglobulin and the bee venom melittin at pH 2. Upon addition of alcohols, beta-lactoglobulin exhibited a transformation from the native state, consisting of beta-sheets, to the alpha-helical state, whereas melittin folded from the unfolded state to the alpha-helical state. In both cases, the order of effectiveness of alcohols was shown to be: HFIP > TFE > isopropanol > ethanol > methanol. The alcohol-induced transitions were analyzed assuming a two-state mechanism to obtain the m value, a measure of the dependence of the free energy change on alcohol concentration. Comparison of the m values indicates that the high potential of TFE can be explained by the additive contribution of constituent groups, i.e., F atoms and alkyl group. On the other hand, the high potential of HFIP is more than that expected from the additive effects, suggesting that the cooperative formation of micelle-like clusters of HFIP is important.  相似文献   

20.
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