首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The histidine-rich peptides of the LAH4 family were designed using cationic antimicrobial peptides such as magainin and PGLa as templates. The LAH4 amphipathic helical sequences exhibit a multitude of interesting biological properties such as antimicrobial activity, cell penetration of a large variety of cargo and lentiviral transduction enhancement. The parent peptide associates with lipid bilayers where it changes from an orientation along the membrane interface into a transmembrane configuration in a pH-dependent manner. Here we show that LAH4 adopts a transmembrane configuration in fully saturated DMPC membranes already at pH 3.5, i.e. much below the pKa of the histidines whereas the transition pH in POPC correlates closely with histidine neutralization. In contrast in POPG membranes the in-planar configuration is stabilized by about one pH unit. The differences in pH can be converted into energetic contributions for the in-plane to transmembrane transition equilibrium, where the shift in the transition pH due to lipid saturation corresponds to energies which are otherwise obtained by the exchange of several cationic with hydrophobic residues. A similar dependence on lipid saturation has also been observed when the PGLa and magainin antimicrobial peptides interact within lipid bilayers suggesting that the quantitative evaluation presented in this paper also applies to other membrane polypeptides.  相似文献   

2.
A series of histidine-containing peptides (LAH4X6) was designed to investigate the membrane interactions of selected side chains. To this purpose, their pH-dependent transitions from in-plane to transmembrane orientations were investigated by attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared and oriented solid-state NMR spectroscopies. Peptides of the same family have previously been shown to exhibit antibiotic and DNA transfection activities. Solution NMR spectroscopy indicates that these peptides form amphipathic helical structures in membrane environments, and the technique was also used to characterize the pK values of all histidines in the presence of detergent micelles. Whereas one face of the amphipathic helix is clearly hydrophobic, the opposite side is flanked by four histidines surrounding six leucine, alanine, glycine, tryptophan, or tyrosine residues, respectively. This diversity in peptide composition causes pronounced shifts in the midpoint pH of the in-plane to transmembrane helical transition, which is completely abolished for the peptides carrying the most hydrophilic amino acid residues. These properties open up a conceptually new approach to study in a quantitative manner the hydrophobic as well as specific interactions of amino acids in membranes. Notably, the resulting scale for whole residue transitions from the bilayer interface to the hydrophobic membrane interior is obtained from extended helical sequences in lipid bilayers.  相似文献   

3.
The alpha-helix of the designed amphipathic peptide antibiotic LAH(4 )(KKALLALALHHLAHLALHLALALKKA-NH(2)) strongly interacts with phospholipid membranes. The peptide is oriented parallel to the membrane surface under acidic conditions, but transmembrane at physiological pH (Bechinger, B. (1996) J. Mol. Biol. 263, 768-775). LAH(4) exhibits antibiotic activities against Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis; the peptide does not, however, lyse human red blood cells at bacteriocidal concentrations. The antibiotic activities of LAH(4) are 2 orders of magnitude more pronounced at pH 5 when compared with pH 7.5. Although peptide association at low pH is reduced when compared with pH 7.5, the release of the fluorophore calcein from large unilamellar 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphocholine or 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoglycerol vesicles is more pronounced at pH values where LAH(4) adopts an orientation along the membrane surface. The calcein release experiments thereby parallel the results obtained in antibiotic assays. Despite a much higher degree of association, calcein release activity of LAH(4) is significantly decreased for negatively charged membranes. Pronounced differences in the interactions of LAH(4) with 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoglycerol or 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphocholine membranes also become apparent when the mechanisms of dye release are investigated. The results presented in this paper support models in which antibiotic activity is caused by detergent-like membrane destabilization, rather than pore formation by helical peptides in transmembrane alignments.  相似文献   

4.
SP-B(CTERM) is a cationic amphipathic helical peptide and functional fragment composed of residues 63 to 78 of surfactant protein B (SP-B). Static oriented and magic angle spinning solid state NMR, along with molecular dynamics simulation was used to investigate its structure, orientation, and depth in lipid bilayers of several compositions, namely POPC, DPPC, DPPC/POPC/POPG, and bovine lung surfactant extract (BLES). In all lipid environments the peptide was oriented parallel to the membrane surface. While maintaining this approximately planar orientation, SP-B(CTERM) exhibited a flexible topology controlled by subtle variations in lipid composition. SP-B(CTERM)-induced lipid realignment and/or conformational changes at the level of the head group were observed using (31)P solid-state NMR spectroscopy. Measurements of the depth of SP-B(CTERM) indicated the peptide center positions ~8? more deeply than the phosphate headgroups, a topology that may allow the peptide to promote functional lipid structures without causing micellization upon compression.  相似文献   

5.
Bechinger B 《FEBS letters》2001,504(3):161-165
Helical peptides reconstituted into oriented phospholipid bilayers were studied by proton-decoupled 15N solid-state NMR spectroscopy. Whereas hydrophobic channel peptides, such as the N-terminal region of Vpu of HIV-1, adopt transmembrane orientations, amphipathic peptide antibiotics are oriented parallel to the bilayer surface. The interaction contributions that determine the alignment of helical peptides in lipid membranes were analysed using model sequences, and peptides that change their topology in a pH-dependent manner have been designed. The energy contributions of histidines, lysines, leucines and alanines as well as the alignment of peptides and phospholipids under conditions of hydrophobic mismatch have been investigated in considerable detail.  相似文献   

6.
To gain further insight into the antimicrobial activities of cationic linear peptides, we investigated the topology of each of two peptides, PGLa and magainin 2, in oriented phospholipid bilayers in the presence and absence of the other peptide and as a function of the membrane lipid composition. Whereas proton-decoupled 15N solid-state NMR spectroscopy indicates that magainin 2 exhibits stable in-plane alignments under all conditions investigated, PGLa adopts a number of different membrane topologies with considerable variations in tilt angle. Hydrophobic thickness is an important parameter that modulates the alignment of PGLa. In equimolar mixtures of PGLa and magainin 2, the former adopts transmembrane orientations in dimyristoyl-, but not 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-, phospholipid bilayers, whereas magainin 2 remains associated with the surface in all cases. These results have important consequences for the mechanistic models explaining synergistic activities of the peptide mixtures and will be discussed. The ensemble of data suggests that the thinning of the dimyristoyl membranes caused by magainin 2 tips the topological equilibrium of PGLa toward a membrane-inserted configuration. Therefore, lipid-mediated interactions play a fundamental role in determining the topology of membrane peptides and proteins and thereby, possibly, in regulating their activities as well.  相似文献   

7.
Mani R  Buffy JJ  Waring AJ  Lehrer RI  Hong M 《Biochemistry》2004,43(43):13839-13848
The interaction of a beta-hairpin antimicrobial peptide, protegrin-1 (PG-1), with various lipid membranes is investigated by (31)P, (2)H, and (13)C solid-state NMR. Mixed lipid bilayers containing anionic lipids and cholesterol are used to mimic the bacterial and mammalian cell membranes, respectively. (31)P and (2)H spectra of macroscopically oriented samples show that PG-1 induces the formation of an isotropic phase in anionic bilayers containing phosphatidylglycerol. Two-dimensional (31)P exchange experiments indicate that these isotropic lipids are significantly separate from the residual oriented lamellar bilayers, ruling out toroidal pores as the cause for the isotropic signal. (1)H spin diffusion experiments show that PG-1 is not exclusively bound to the isotropic phase but is also present in the residual oriented lamellar bilayers. This dynamic and morphological heterogeneity of the anionic membranes induced by PG-1 is supported by the fact that (13)C T(2) relaxation times measured under cross polarization and direct polarization conditions differ significantly. In contrast to the anionic membrane, the zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine (PC) membrane does not form an isotropic phase in the presence of PG-1 but shows significant orientational disorder. The addition of cholesterol to the PC bilayer significantly reduces this orientational disorder. The (13)C T(2) relaxation times of the PC lipids in the presence of both cholesterol and PG-1 suggest that the peptide may decrease the dynamic heterogeneity of the cholesterol-containing membrane. The observed selective interaction of PG-1 with different lipid membranes is consistent with its biological function and may be caused by its strong cationic and amphipathic structure.  相似文献   

8.
Ouellet M  Doucet JD  Voyer N  Auger M 《Biochemistry》2007,46(22):6597-6606
We have investigated the interaction between a synthetic amphipathic 14-mer peptide and model membranes by solid-state NMR. The 14-mer peptide is composed of leucines and phenylalanines modified by the addition of crown ethers and forms a helical amphipathic structure in solution and bound to lipid membranes. To shed light on its membrane topology, 31P, 2H, 15N solid-state NMR experiments have been performed on the 14-mer peptide in interaction with mechanically oriented bilayers of dilauroylphosphatidylcholine (DLPC), dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC), and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC). The 31P, 2H, and 15N NMR results indicate that the 14-mer peptide remains at the surface of the DLPC, DMPC, and DPPC bilayers stacked between glass plates and perturbs the lipid orientation relative to the magnetic field direction. Its membrane topology is similar in DLPC and DMPC bilayers, whereas the peptide seems to be more deeply inserted in DPPC bilayers, as revealed by the greater orientational and motional disorder of the DPPC lipid headgroup and acyl chains. 15N{31P} rotational echo double resonance experiments have also been used to measure the intermolecular dipole-dipole interaction between the 14-mer peptide and the phospholipid headgroup of DMPC multilamellar vesicles, and the results indicate that the 14-mer peptide is in contact with the polar region of the DMPC lipids. On the basis of these studies, the mechanism of membrane perturbation of the 14-mer peptide is associated to the induction of a positive curvature strain induced by the peptide lying on the bilayer surface and seems to be independent of the bilayer hydrophobic thickness.  相似文献   

9.
To clarify the molecular mechanism by which an amphipathic negatively charged peptide consisting of 11 residues (WAE) induces fusion, and the relevance of these features for fusion, its mode of insertion and orientation into target bilayers were investigated. Using attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR) in combination with techniques based on tryptophan fluorescence, the peptide was found to form an alpha-helix, shallowly inserted into the membrane to which it is anchored. Interestingly, in the presence of target membranes, WAE inserts into the target bilayer as an alpha-helix oriented almost parallel to the lipid acyl chains. The accessibility of the peptide to either acrylamide (as an aqueous quencher of Trp fluorescence) or deuterium oxide (on the course of an FTIR deuteration kinetics) was lower in the presence than in the absence of target membranes, confirming that under those conditions, the peptide was shielded from the aqueous environment. Since fusion experiments have shown a temperature dependence, the effect of this later parameter on the structure and mode of insertion of the peptide was also analyzed. In the presence of target membrane, but not in their absence, the amount of alpha-helical structure increased with temperature, reflecting a similar temperature-dependent increase in the rate and extent of WAE-induced fusion. Also, the extent of penetration of the helix into the target membrane was greater at 37 degrees C than at lower temperatures. This temperature-dependent distinction was revealed by a decreased accessibility of the peptide to deuterium oxide and acrylamide at 37 degrees C as compared to that at lower temperatures. These data underscore the role of peptide structure, peptide penetration, and orientation in the mechanism of protein-induced membrane fusion.  相似文献   

10.
The 18-amino acid amphipathic helical peptide Ac-DWFKAFYDKVAEKFKEAF-NH(2) promotes the separation of cholesterol from the phospholipid, resulting in the formation of cholesterol crystallites, even at mole fractions of cholesterol as low as 0.3. The peptide exerts a greater degree of penetration into membranes of pure phosphatidylcholine in the absence of cholesterol than into bilayers of phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol. The circular dichroism spectrum of the peptide in buffer indicates that it self-associates, leading to the formation of structures with higher helical content. However, in the presence of lipid, the peptide remains helical over a larger concentration range. The peptide undergoes a thermal transition on heating. Cholesterol has little effect on the secondary structure of the peptide; however, increased Trp emission intensity in the absence of cholesterol indicates a deeper penetration of the helix upon removal of cholesterol from the membrane. The results with these model systems demonstrate changes in peptide-lipid interactions that may be related to the observed biological properties of this peptide.  相似文献   

11.
We use a number of computational and experimental approaches to investigate the membrane topology of the membrane-interacting C-terminal domain of the HIV-1 gp41 fusion protein. Several putative transmembrane regions are identified using hydrophobicity analysis based on the Wimley-White scales, including the membrane-proximal external region (MPER). The MPER region is an important target for neutralizing anti-HIV monoclonal antibodies and is believed to have an interfacial topology in the membrane. To assess the possibility of a transmembrane topology of MPER, we examined the membrane interactions of a peptide corresponding to a 22-residue stretch of the MPER sequence (residues 662–683) using fluorescence spectroscopy and oriented circular dichroism. In addition to the previously reported interfacial location, we identify a stable transmembrane conformation of the peptide in synthetic lipid bilayers. All-atom molecular dynamics simulations of the MPER-derived peptide in a lipid bilayer demonstrate a stable helical structure with an average tilt of 24 degrees, with the five tryptophan residues sampling different environments inside the hydrocarbon core of the lipid bilayer, consistent with the observed spectral properties of intrinsic fluorescence. The degree of lipid bilayer penetration obtained by computer simulation was verified using depth-dependent fluorescence quenching of a selectively attached fluorescence probe. Overall, our data indicate that the MPER sequence can have at least two stable conformations in the lipid bilayer, interfacial and transmembrane, and suggest a possibility that external perturbations can switch the topology during physiological functioning.  相似文献   

12.
The antimicrobial arenicin peptides are cationic amphipathic sequences that strongly interact with membranes. Through a cystine ring closure a cyclic β-sheet structure is formed in aqueous solution, which persists when interacting with model membranes. In order to investigate the conformation, interactions, dynamics, and topology of their bilayer-associated states, arenicin 1 and 2 were prepared by chemical solid-phase peptide synthesis or by bacterial overexpression, labeled selectively or uniformly with (15)N, reconstituted into oriented membranes, and investigated by proton-decoupled (31)P and (15)N solid-state NMR spectroscopy. Whereas the (31)P NMR spectra indicate that the peptide induces orientational disorder at the level of the phospholipid head groups, the (15)N chemical shift spectra agree well with a regular β-sheet conformation such as the one observed in micellar environments. In contrast, the data do not fit the twisted β-sheet structure found in aqueous buffer. Furthermore, the chemical shift distribution is indicative of considerable conformational and/or topological heterogeneity when at the same time the (15)N NMR spectra exclude alignments of the peptide where the β-sheet lies side ways on the membrane surface. The ensemble of experimental constraints, the amphipathic character of the peptide, and in particular the distribution of the six arginine residues are in agreement with a boatlike dimer structure, similar or related to the one observed in micellar solution, that floats on the membrane surface with the possibility to oligomerize into higher order structures and/or to insert in a transmembrane fashion.  相似文献   

13.
Deuterium/hydrogen exchange factors (chi) were measured for the backbone amide sites of the membrane-bound forms of the 50-residue fd coat protein and the 23-residue magainin2 peptide in lipid micelles by solution nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. By combining kinetic and thermodynamic effects, deuterium/hydrogen exchange factors overcome the principal limitations encountered in the measurements of kinetic protection factors and thermodynamic fractionation factors for membrane proteins. The magnitudes of the exchange factors can be correlated with the structure and topology of membrane-associated polypeptides. In fd coat protein, residues in the transmembrane helix have exchange factors that are substantially smaller than those in the amphipathic surface helix or the loop connecting the two helices. For the amphipathic helical peptide, magainin2, the exchange factors of residues exposed to the solvent are appreciably larger than those that face the hydrocarbon portion of membrane bilayers. These examples demonstrate that deuterium/hydrogen exchange factors can be measured by solution NMR spectroscopy and used to identify residues in transmembrane helices as well as to determine the polarity of amphipathic helices in membrane proteins.  相似文献   

14.
The cationic amphipathic alpha-helical antibiotic peptide, pleurocidin, from the winter flounder Pleuronectes americanus associates strongly with anionic membranes where it is able to translocate across the membrane, cause dye leakage from vesicles and induce pore like channel conductance. To investigate the mechanism of pleurocidin antibiotic activity in more detail we have applied a variety of spectroscopic techniques to study the interaction of pleurocidin with model membranes. At neutral pH the peptide inserts into membranes containing anionic lipids and, as shown by proton-decoupled 15N solid-state NMR spectroscopy of macroscopically oriented samples, is aligned parallel to the membrane surface. 2H solid-state NMR spectroscopy of chain deuterated phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and phosphatidylglycerol (PG) lipids in mixed membranes shows that pleurocidin interacts with both the zwitterionic PE and anionic PG but disrupts the lipid acyl chain order of the anionic PG lipids more effectively. At acidic pH the three histidine residues of pleurocidin become protonated and positively charged which does not alter the membrane disrupting effect nor the location of the peptide in the membrane. The results are interpreted in terms of a structural model for pleurocidin inserted into anionic lipid membranes and the implications of our data are discussed in terms of a general mechanism for the antibiotic activity.  相似文献   

15.
Natural liquid crystalline membranes are made up of many different lipids carrying a mixture of saturated and unsaturated fatty acyl chains. Whereas in the past considerable attention has been paid to cholesterol content, the phospholipid head groups and the membrane surface charge the detailed fatty acyl composition was often considered less important. However, recent investigations indicate that the detailed fatty acyl chain composition has pronounced effects on the oligomerization of the transmembrane helical anchoring domains of the MHC II receptor or the membrane alignment of the cationic antimicrobial peptide PGLa. In contrast the antimicrobial peptides magainin 2 and alamethicin are less susceptible to lipid saturation. Using histidine-rich LAH4 designer peptides the high energetic contributions of lipid saturation in stabilizing transmembrane helical alignments are quantitatively evaluated. These observations can have important implications for the biological regulation of membrane proteins and should be taken into considerations during biophysical or structural experiments.  相似文献   

16.
Pep-1 is a cell-penetrating peptide (CPP) with the ability to translocate across biological membranes and introduce active proteins inside cells. The uptake mechanism used by this CPP is, as yet, unknown in detail. Previous results show that such a mechanism is endocytosis-independent and suggests that physical-chemical interactions between the peptide and lipid bilayers govern the translocation mechanism. Formation of a transmembrane pore has been proposed but this issue has always remained controversial. In this work the secondary structure of pep-1 in the absence/presence of lipidic bilayers was determined by CD and ATR-FTIR spectroscopies and the occurrence of pore formation was evaluated through electrophysiological measurements with planar lipid membranes and by confocal microscopy using giant unilamellar vesicles. Despite pep-1 hydrophobic domain tendency for amphipathic α-helix conformation in the presence of lipidic bilayers, there was no evidence for membrane pores in the presence of pep-1. Furthermore, alterations in membrane permeability only occurred for high peptide/lipid ratios, which induced the complete membrane disintegration. Such observations indicate that electrostatic interactions are of first importance in the pep-1-membrane interactions and show that pores are not formed. A peptide-lipid structure is probably formed during peptide partition, which favours peptide translocation.  相似文献   

17.
Pep-1 is a cell-penetrating peptide (CPP) with the ability to translocate across biological membranes and introduce active proteins inside cells. The uptake mechanism used by this CPP is, as yet, unknown in detail. Previous results show that such a mechanism is endocytosis-independent and suggests that physical-chemical interactions between the peptide and lipid bilayers govern the translocation mechanism. Formation of a transmembrane pore has been proposed but this issue has always remained controversial. In this work the secondary structure of pep-1 in the absence/presence of lipidic bilayers was determined by CD and ATR-FTIR spectroscopies and the occurrence of pore formation was evaluated through electrophysiological measurements with planar lipid membranes and by confocal microscopy using giant unilamellar vesicles. Despite pep-1 hydrophobic domain tendency for amphipathic alpha-helix conformation in the presence of lipidic bilayers, there was no evidence for membrane pores in the presence of pep-1. Furthermore, alterations in membrane permeability only occurred for high peptide/lipid ratios, which induced the complete membrane disintegration. Such observations indicate that electrostatic interactions are of first importance in the pep-1-membrane interactions and show that pores are not formed. A peptide-lipid structure is probably formed during peptide partition, which favours peptide translocation.  相似文献   

18.
Determining the structure of membrane-active peptides inside lipid bilayers is essential to understand their mechanism of action. Molecular dynamics simulations can easily provide atomistic details, but need experimental validation. We assessed the reliability of self-assembling (or “minimum-bias”) and potential of mean force (PMF) approaches, using all-atom (AA) and coarse-grained (CG) force-fields. The LAH4 peptide was selected as a stringent test case, since it is known to attain different orientations depending on the protonation state of its four histidine residues.In all simulations the histidine side-chains inserted in the membrane when neutral, while they interacted with phospholipid headgroups in their charged state. This led to transmembrane orientations for neutral-His LAH4 in all minimum-bias AA simulations and in most CG trajectories. By contrast, the charged-His peptide stabilized membrane defects in AA simulations, whereas it was located at the membrane surface in some CG trajectories, and interacted with both lipid leaflets in others. This behavior is consistent with the higher antimicrobial activity and membrane-permeabilizing behavior of the charged-His LAH4. In addition, good agreement with solid-state NMR orientational data was observed in AA simulations.PMF calculations correctly predicted a higher membrane affinity for the neutral-His peptide. Interestingly, the structures and relative populations of PMF local free-energy minima corresponded to those determined in the less computationally demanding minimum-bias simulations.These data provide an indication about the possible membrane-perturbation mechanism of the charged-His LAH4 peptide: by interacting with lipid headgroups of both leaflets through its cationic side-chains, it could favor membrane defects and facilitate translocation across the bilayer.  相似文献   

19.
Members of the LAH4 family of cationic linear peptide antibiotics have been designed to form amphipathic helical structures in membrane environments and switch from alignments parallel to the bilayer surface to transmembrane orientations in a pH-dependent manner. Here the aggregation in aqueous buffer of two members of the family has been investigated by DLS. The peptides form monomers or small oligomers at pH = 5 but associate into nano-sized aggregates at physiological pH. The diameter of these latter complexes can be considerably reduced by sonication. Furthermore, the membrane interactions of the various supramolecular aggregates with POPC or mixed POPC/POPS vesicles have been investigated in calcein-release assays. In all the cases tested, the large preformed oligomeric peptide aggregates of 20-40 nm in size were more active than the structures with the smallest hydrodynamic radii in releasing the fluorescent dye from LUV. In contrast, the relative activity after sonication depends on the specific environment tested. The data suggest that these amphiphiles form micellar structures and support the notion that they can act in a manner comparable to detergents.  相似文献   

20.
Tatulian SA  Tamm LK 《Biochemistry》2000,39(3):496-507
Influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA), the viral envelope glycoprotein that mediates fusion between the viral and cellular membranes, is a homotrimer of three subunits, each containing two disulfide-linked polypeptide chains, HA(1) and HA(2). Each HA(2) chain spans the viral membrane with a single putative transmembrane alpha-helix near its C-terminus. Fusion experiments with recombinant HAs suggest that this sequence is required for a late step of membrane fusion, as a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored analogue of HA only mediates "hemifusion" of membranes, i.e., the merging of the proximal, but not distal, leaflets of the two juxtaposed lipid bilayers [Kemble et al. (1994) Cell 76, 383-391]. To find a structural explanation for the function of the transmembrane domain of HA(2) in membrane fusion, we have studied the secondary structure, orientation, oligomerization, and lipid interactions of a synthetic peptide representing the transmembrane segment of X:31 HA (TMX31) by circular dichroism and attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and by gel electrophoresis. The peptide was predominantly alpha-helical in detergent micelles and in phospholipid bilayers. The helicity was increased in lipid bilayers composed of acidic lipids compared to pure phosphatidylcholine bilayers. In planar lipid bilayers, the helices were oriented close to the membrane normal. TMX31 aggregated into small heat-resistant oligomers composed of two to five subunits in SDS micelles. Amide hydrogen exchange experiments indicated that a large fraction of the helical residues were accessible to water, suggesting the possibility that TMX31 forms pores in lipid bilayers. Finally, the peptide increased the acyl chain order in lipid bilayers, which may be related to the preferential association of HA with lipid "rafts" in the cell surface and which may be an important prerequisite for complete membrane fusion.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

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