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1.
The structures of the first and the second transmembrane segment of the bovine mitochondrial oxoglutarate carrier (OGC) were studied by circular dichroism (CD) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopies. Peptides 21–46 and 78–108 of its primary sequence were synthesized and structurally characterized in membrane-mimetic environments. CD data showed that at high concentrations of TFE (>50%) and SDS (>2%) both peptides assume α-helical structures, whereas in more hydrophilic environments only peptide 78–108 has a helical structure. 1H-NMR spectra of the two peptides in TFE/water and SDS were fully assigned, and the secondary structures of the peptides were obtained from nuclear Overhauser effects, 3JαH-NH coupling constants and αH chemical shifts. The three-dimensional solution structures of the peptides in TFE/water were generated by distance geometry calculations. A well-defined α-helix was found in the region K24-V39 of peptide 21–46 and in the region A86–F106 of peptide 78–108. We cannot exclude that in intact OGC the extension of these helices is longer. The helix of peptide 21–46 is essentially hydrophobic, whereas that of peptide 78–108 is predominantly hydrophilic.  相似文献   

2.
The structures of the fifth and sixth transmembrane segments of the bovine mitochondrial oxoglutarate carrier (OGC) and of the hydrophilic loop that connects them were studied by CD and NMR spectroscopies. Peptides F215-R246, W279-K305 and P257-L278 were synthesized and structurally characterized. CD data showed that at high concentrations of TFE and SDS all peptides assume α-helical structures. 1H-NMR spectra of the three peptides in TFE/water were fully assigned and the secondary structures of the peptides were obtained from nuclear Overhauser effects, 3JαH-NH coupling constants and αH chemical shifts. The three-dimensional solution structures of the peptides were generated by distance geometry calculations. A well-defined α–helix was found in the region L220-V243 of peptide F215-R246 (TMS-V), in the region P284-M303 of peptide W279-K305 (TMS-VI) and in the region N261-F275 of peptide P257-L278 (hydrophilic loop). The helix L220-V243 exhibited a sharp kink at P239, while a little bend around P291 was observed in the helical region P284-M303. Fluorescence studies performed on peptide W279-K305, alone and together with other transmembrane segments of OGC, showed that the W279 fluorescence was quenched upon addition of peptide F215-R246, but not of peptides K21-K46, R78-R108 and P117-A149 suggesting a specific interaction between TMS-V and TMS-VI of OGC.  相似文献   

3.
The structures of the fifth and sixth transmembrane segments of the bovine mitochondrial oxoglutarate carrier (OGC) and of the hydrophilic loop that connects them were studied by CD and NMR spectroscopies. Peptides F215-R246, W279-K305 and P257-L278 were synthesized and structurally characterized. CD data showed that at high concentrations of TFE and SDS all peptides assume alpha-helical structures. (1)H-NMR spectra of the three peptides in TFE/water were fully assigned and the secondary structures of the peptides were obtained from nuclear Overhauser effects, (3)J(aH-NH) coupling constants and alphaH chemical shifts. The three-dimensional solution structures of the peptides were generated by distance geometry calculations. A well-defined alpha-helix was found in the region L220-V243 of peptide F215-R246 (TMS-V), in the region P284-M303 of peptide W279-K305 (TMS-VI) and in the region N261-F275 of peptide P257-L278 (hydrophilic loop). The helix L220-V243 exhibited a sharp kink at P239, while a little bend around P291 was observed in the helical region P284-M303. Fluorescence studies performed on peptide W279-K305, alone and together with other transmembrane segments of OGC, showed that the W279 fluorescence was quenched upon addition of peptide F215-R246, but not of peptides K21-K46, R78-R108 and P117-A149 suggesting a specific interaction between TMS-V and TMS-VI of OGC.  相似文献   

4.
Solution structures of a 23 residue glycopeptide II (KIS* RFLLYMKNLLNRIIDDMVEQ, where * denotes the glycan Gal-beta-(1-3)-alpha-GalNAc) and its deglycosylated counterpart I derived from the C-terminal leucine zipper domain of low molecular weight human salivary mucin (MUC7) were studied using CD, NMR spectroscopy and molecular modeling. The peptide I was synthesized using the Fmoc chemistry following the conventional procedure and the glycopeptide II was synthesized incorporating the O-glycosylated building block (Nalpha-Fmoc-Ser-[Ac4-beta-D-Gal-(1,3)-Ac2-alpha-D-GalN3+ ++]-OPfp) at the appropriate position in stepwise assembly of peptide chain. Solution structures of these glycosylated and nonglycosylated peptides were studied in water and in the presence of 50% of an organic cosolvent, trifluoroethanol (TFE) using circular dichroism (CD), and in 50% TFE using two-dimensional proton nuclear magnetic resonance (2D 1H NMR) spectroscopy. CD spectra in aqueous medium indicate that the apopeptide I adapts, mostly, a beta-sheet conformation whereas the glycopeptide II assumes helical structure. This transition in the secondary structure, upon glycosylation, demonstrates that the carbohydrate moiety exerts significant effect on the peptide backbone conformation. However, in 50% TFE both the peptides show pronounced helical structure. Sequential and medium range NOEs, CalphaH chemical shift perturbations, 3JNH:CalphaH couplings and deuterium exchange rates of the amide proton resonances in water containing 50% TFE indicate that the peptide I adapts alpha-helical structure from Ile2-Val21 and the glycopeptide II adapts alpha-helical structure from Ser3-Glu22. The observation of continuous stretch of helix in both the peptides as observed by both NMR and CD spectroscopy strongly suggests that the C-terminal domain of MUC7 with heptad repeats of leucines or methionine residues may be stabilized by dimeric leucine zipper motif. The results reported herein may be invaluable in understanding the aggregation (or dimerization) of MUC7 glycoprotein which would eventually have implications in determining its structure-function relationship.  相似文献   

5.
Dermaseptins are antimicrobial peptides from frog skin that have high membrane-lytic activity against a broad spectrum of microorganisms. The structure of dermaseptin B2 in aqueous solution, in TFE/water mixtures, and in micellar and nonmicellar SDS was analyzed by CD, FTIR, fluorescence, and NMR spectroscopy combined with molecular dynamics calculations. Dermaseptin B2 is unstructured in water, but helical conformations, mostly in segment 3-18, are stabilized by addition of TFE. SDS titration showed that dermaseptin B2 assumes nonhelical structures at SDS concentrations far below the critical micellar concentration and helical structures at micellar concentrations. Dermaseptin B2 bound to SDS micelles (0.4 mM peptide, 80 mM SDS) adopts a well-defined amphipathic helix between residues 11-31 connected to a more flexible helical segment spanning residues 1-8 by a flexible hinge region around Val9 and Gly10. Experiments using paramagnetic probes showed that dermaseptin B2 lies near the surface of SDS micelles and that residue Trp3 is buried in the SDS micelle, but close to the surface. A slow exchange equilibrium occurs at higher peptide/SDS ratios (2 mM peptide, 80 mM SDS) between forms having distinct sets of resonances in the N-terminal 1-11 segment. This equilibrium could reflect different oligomeric states of dermaseptin B2 interacting with SDS micelles. Structure-activity studies on dermaseptin B2 analogues showed that the N-terminal 1-11 segment is an absolute requirement for antibacterial activity, while the C-terminal 10-33 region is also important for full antibiotic activity.  相似文献   

6.
S Park  S H Park  H C Ahn  S Kim  S S Kim  B J Lee  B J Lee 《FEBS letters》2001,507(1):95-100
Novel cationic antimicrobial peptides, named nigrocin 1 and 2, were isolated from the skin of Rana nigromaculata and their amino acid sequences were determined. These peptides manifested a broad spectrum of antimicrobial activity against various microorganisms with different specificity. By primary structural analysis, it was revealed that nigrocin 1 has high sequence homology with brevinin 2 but nigrocin 2 has low sequence homology with any other known antimicrobial peptides. To investigate the structure-activity relationship of nigrocin 2, which has a unique primary structure, circular dichroism (CD) and homonuclear nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) studies were performed. CD investigation revealed that nigrocin 2 adopts mainly an alpha-helical structure in trifluoroethanol (TFE)/H(2)O solution, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles, and dodecylphosphocholine micelles. The solution structures of nigrocin 2 in TFE/H(2)O (1:1, v/v) solution and in SDS micelles were determined by homonuclear NMR. Nigrocin 2 consists of a typical amphipathic alpha-helix spanning residues 3-18 in both 50% TFE solution and SDS micelles. From the structural comparison of nigrocin 2 with other known antimicrobial peptides, nigrocin 2 could be classified into the family of antimicrobial peptides containing a single linear amphipathic alpha-helix that potentially disrupts membrane integrity, which would result in cell death.  相似文献   

7.
To study the effects of a point mutation found in Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD) on the physicochemical and structural properties of the extracellular loop 4 of the myelin proteolipid protein (PLP), we synthesized the peptide PLP(181-230)Pro215 and one mutant PLP(181-230)Ser215 with regioselective formation of the two disulphide bridges Cys200-Cys219 and Cys183-Cys227. As conventional amino acid building blocks failed to give crude peptides of good quality we had to optimize the synthesis by introducing pseudoproline dipeptide building blocks during the peptide elongation. In peptide Pro215 the first bridge Cys200-Cys219 was obtained after air oxidation, but in peptide Ser215 because of aggregation, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) oxidation had to be used. The second bridge Cys183-Cys227 was obtained by iodine oxidation of both Cys (acetamidomethyl, Acm)-protected peptides. The secondary structures of the parent and mutant loops were analysed by circular dichroism (CD) in the presence of trifluoroethanol (TFE) and sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) as a membrane mimetic. Analysis of the spectra showed that the content of alpha-helix and beta-sheet varied differently for both peptides in TFE and SDS solutions, demonstrating the sensitivity of their conformation to the environment and the differences in their secondary structure. The ability of both peptides to insert into the SDS micelles was assayed by intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence.  相似文献   

8.
We have analyzed by circular dichroism (CD) and proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) the helical propensity of the all-beta protein acidic fibroblast growth factor (aFGF) and two peptides corresponding to beta-strand 8 (beta8 peptide, amino acids 95-107) and the beta-strand 8/turn/beta-strand 9 hairpin (beta8/9 peptide, amino acids 95-114), which has been involved in receptor binding. A secondary structure prediction of aFGF carried out by several procedures labels the 95-104 sequence as predominantly alpha-helical. A titration of aFGF with 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol (TFE) induces a change in the far-UV CD spectrum of the protein giving rise to a prominent alpha-helical shape (22% alpha-helix). The cooperativity of the transition and the moderate TFE concentrations used (midpoint at 24%) suggest that the effect of TFE is specific. Moreover, a titration performed at pH 2 yields a higher amount of alpha-helix (55%) at a smaller TFE concentration. Synthetic peptides containing the beta8 and beta8/9 sequences display a random coil conformation at pH 7 but acquire alpha-helical structure in the presence of TFE, methanol, and SDS micelles. At pH below 3.0 a significant amount (20-30%) of alpha-helical conformation is present in both the beta8 and beta8/9 peptides even in the absence of other solvent additives. The secondary structure of the peptides was determined by proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR). These results suggest that the 95-114 sequence of aFGF has helical propensity and that the protein may fold nonhierarchically in the early steps of folding, acquiring its final beta-structure by a later interaction with the rest of the polypeptide.  相似文献   

9.
In order to gain insight into the gating mechanisms of Na+ channels, in particular their inactivation mechanisms, we studied the structures of the Na+ channel inactivation gate related peptide which includes the IFM (Ile-Phe-Met) motif (Ac-KKKFGGQDIFMTEEQKK-NH2; K1480-K1496 in rat brain type-IIA Na+ channels, MP-3A) and its F/Q(Gln) substituted one (MP-4A) in trifluoroethanol (TFE) solutions and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles using circular dichroism (CD) and 1H-NMR spectroscopies. Based on observed nuclear Overhauser effect constraints, three-dimensional structures of MP-3A and MP-4A were determined using simulated annealing molecular dynamics/ energy minimization calculations. In TFE solutions, no appreciable differences in the structure were observed using either CD or NMR spectra. In SDS micelles, however, the two peptides exhibited definitely different structures from each other. It was found that in MP-3A, residues 11488 and T1491 were spatially proximate with each other owing to hydrogen bonding between the amide proton of 11488 and the hydroxyl oxygen atom of T1491, whereas in MP-4A, F/Q substitution separated them owing to conformational changes. The solvent-accessible surfaces calculated for the structures of MP-3A and MP-4A showed that the former has a smoother interaction surface to the hydrophobic docking site than the latter. In conclusion, the conformational changes, as well as decreased hydrophobicity around the IFM motif owing to the F/Q mutation, may be one reason why F1489Q mutated channels cannot inactivate almost completely.  相似文献   

10.
Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) has consistently been shown to induce secondary structure, particularly alpha-helices, in polypeptides, and is commonly used to model membrane and other hydrophobic environments. However, the precise mechanism by which SDS induces these conformational changes remains unclear. To examine the role of electrostatic interactions in this mechanism, we have designed two hydrophilic, charged amphipathic alpha-helical peptides, one basic (QAPAYKKAAKKLAES) and the other acidic (QAPAYEEAAEELAKS), and their structures were studied by CD and NMR. The design of the peptides is based on the sequence of the segment of residues 56-70 of human platelet factor 4 [PF4(56-70), QAPLYKKIIKKLLES]. Both peptides were unstructured in water, and in the presence of neutral, zwitterionic, or cationic detergents. However, in SDS at neutral pH, the basic peptide folded into an alpha-helix. By contrast, the pH needed to be lowered to 1.8 before alpha-helix formation was observed for the acidic peptide. Strong, attractive electrostatic interactions, between the anionic groups of SDS and the cationic groups of the lysines, appeared to be necessary to initiate the folding of the basic peptide. NMR analysis showed that the basic peptide was fully embedded in SDS-peptide micelles, and that its three-dimensional alpha-helical structure could be superimposed on that of the native structure of PF4(56-70). These results enabled us to propose a working model of the basic peptide-SDS complex, and a mechanism for SDS-induced alpha-helical folding. This study demonstrates that, while the folding of peptides is mostly driven by hydrophobic effects, electrostatic interactions play a significant role in the formation and the stabilization of SDS-induced structure.  相似文献   

11.
Natural resistance associated macrophage protein 1 (Nramp1), an integral membrane protein with 12 predicted transmembrane domains (TMs), is a divalent cation transporter associated with infectious and autoimmune diseases. A naturally occurring mutation G169D within TM4 of Nramp1 leads to the loss of function, suggesting potential importance of TM4 for the biological function of the protein. In this study, we determine the three‐dimensional structure and topology of a synthetic peptide, del(T178), corresponding to Nramp1(164‐191) (basically consisting of the putative TM4 of Nramp1) with Thr178 deletion in TFE and SDS micelles using NMR and CD spectroscopic techniques, and compare the results with those of the wildtype peptide. Similarly to the wildtype peptide, the del(T178) peptide still forms an amphiphilic‐like α‐helical structure in both membrane mimics and is embedded in SDS micelles. Differently, whereas the wild‐type peptide forms a helix bundle with the hydrophilic side facing the interior of the bundle, the del(T178) peptide exists as a monomer in the membrane mimics and the hydrophilic side of the helix is located near the interface of SDS micelles. Moreover, a strongly cooperative protonation occurs between intramolecular Asp residues for the del(T178) peptide in SDS micelles, while the cooperative proton binding between intermolecular Asp residues was observed for the wildtype peptide. The difference in the results of the two peptides suggests that the deletion of Thr178 impairs intermolecular interaction of the peptide. Copyright © 2009 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Conformational preferences of secretin as a model peptide have been analyzed by CD and IR spectroscopy in reverse micelles of AOT/isooctane/water and compared to those in aqueous TFE, in SDS micelles and in DMPG vesicles. Among the systems examined, reverse micelles and phospholipid vesicles displayed almost identical conformational equilibria. Very high lipid-to-peptide ratios can be obtained in reverse micelles with full retention of optical transparency, even at millimolar peptide concentrations, thus indicating this system to be an interesting mimic of cell membrane environments for spectroscopic analysis of bioactive peptide conformations.Abbreviations TFE trifluoroethanol - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - DMPG dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol - AOT bis(2-ethylhexyl)sulfosuccinate - CMC critical micellar concentration - VIP vasoactive intestinal peptide  相似文献   

13.
Najbar LV  Craik DJ  Wade JD  McLeish MJ 《Biochemistry》2000,39(19):5911-5920
Using CD and 2D (1)H NMR spectroscopy, we have identified potential initiation sites for the folding of T4 lysozyme by examining the conformational preferences of peptide fragments corresponding to regions of secondary structure. CD spectropolarimetry showed most peptides were unstructured in water, but adopted partial helical conformations in TFE and SDS solution. This was also consistent with the (1)H NMR data which showed that the peptides were predominantly disordered in water, although in some cases, nascent or small populations of partially folded conformations could be detected. NOE patterns, coupling constants, and deviations from random coil Halpha chemical shift values complemented the CD data and confirmed that many of the peptides were helical in TFE and SDS micelles. In particular, the peptide corresponding to helix E in the native enzyme formed a well-defined helix in both TFE and SDS, indicating that helix E potentially forms an initiation site for T4 lysozyme folding. The data for the other peptides indicated that helices D, F, G, and H are dependent on tertiary interactions for their folding and/or stability. Overall, the results from this study, and those of our earlier studies, are in agreement with modeling and HD-deuterium exchange experiments, and support an hierarchical model of folding for T4 lysozyme.  相似文献   

14.
Sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) and dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) micelles are often used to mimic the membrane- or receptor-bound states of peptides in NMR studies. From the present examination of a 26-residue analog of exendin-4 (TrEX4) by NMR and CD in water, aqueous 30% trifluoroethanol (TFE), and bound to both SDS and DPC micelles, it is clear that these two lipid micelles can yield very different peptide structures. The Trp-cage fold (also observed in 30% TFE) is present when TrEX4 is bound to SDS micelles; however, tertiary structure is absent in the presence of DPC micelles. The loss of tertiary structure is attributed to an energetically favorable interaction (estimated as 2-3 kcal/mol) of the tryptophan side chain with the phosphocholine head groups. These dramatic structural differences suggest that care must be taken when using either SDS or DPC to mimic the membrane- or receptor-bound states.  相似文献   

15.
Zhang X  Adda CG  Low A  Zhang J  Zhang W  Sun H  Tu X  Anders RF  Norton RS 《Biochemistry》2012,51(7):1380-1387
Merozoite surface protein 2 (MSP2), an abundant glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein on the surface of Plasmodium falciparum merozoites, is a promising malaria vaccine candidate. MSP2 is intrinsically disordered and forms amyloid-like fibrils in solution under physiological conditions. The 25 N-terminal residues (MSP2(1-25)) play an important role in both fibril formation and membrane binding of the full-length protein. In this study, the fibril formation and solution structure of MSP2(1-25) in the membrane mimetic solvents sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), dodecylphosphocholine (DPC), and trifluoroethanol (TFE) have been investigated by transmission electronic microscopy, turbidity, thioflavin T fluorescence, circular dichroism (CD), and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Turbidity data showed that the aggregation of MSP2(1-25) was suppressed in the presence of membrane mimetic solvents. CD spectra indicated that helical structure in MSP2(1-25) was stabilized in SDS and DPC micelles and in high concentrations of TFE. The structure of MSP2(1-25) in 50% aqueous TFE, determined using NMR, showed that the peptide formed an amphipathic helix encompassing residues 10-24. Low concentrations of TFE favored partially folded helical conformations, as demonstrated by CD and NMR, and promoted MSP2(1-25) fibril formation. Our data suggest that partially folded helical conformations of the N-terminal region of MSP2 are on the pathway to amyloid fibril formation, while higher degrees of helical structure stabilized by high concentrations of TFE or membrane mimetics suppress self-association and thus inhibit fibril formation. The roles of the induced helical conformations in membrane interactions are also discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Neuropeptide gamma belongs to tachykinin families which have a common C-terminal amino acid sequence (Phe-X-Leu-Met-NH2) and which induce various biological responses including salivation, hypotension, and contraction of gastrointestinal, respiratory, and urinary smooth muscle. In the present study, we present the solution structures of neuropeptide gamma (NPgamma) from gold fish (G-NPgamma) and mammalian NPgamma (M-NPgamma), as determined by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy in 50% trifluoroethanol (TFE)/water (1 : 1, v/v) solution and 200 mm sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles. In aqueous TFE solution, G-NPgamma has a alpha-helical conformation in the region of His12-Met21 and a short helix in the N-terminal region, and has a beta-turn from Arg9 to Arg11 in between. In aqueous TFE solution, M-NPgamma also has alpha-helical conformations both in the C-terminal region and the N-terminal region and a beta-turn from His9 to Arg11 in between. In SDS micelle, the structure of G-NPgamma contains a stable alpha-helix from His12 to Met21 and a beta-turn from Arg9 to Arg11, while M-NPgamma has a short helix from Ser16 to Met21. The region from His12 to Met21 corresponds to the amino acid sequence of neurokinin A. Neuropeptide gamma may act as a precursor of neurokinin A and the post-translational processing of this peptide involves the enzymatic attack of the basic beta-turn region from residue 9 to residue 11 in the middle. From our relaxation study, it could be suggested that in fish system G-NPgamma induces the biological actions corresponding to those of substance P in mammalian system. The structures of G-NPgamma and M-NPgamma contain alpha-helical structures at the C-terminus and this helix seems to promote the affinity for NK1 and/or NK2 receptor.  相似文献   

17.
Xue R  Wang S  Qi H  Song Y  Wang C  Li F 《Biochimica et biophysica acta》2008,1778(6):1444-1452
Nramp1 (natural resistance-associated macrophage protein 1) is an integral membrane protein with 12 putative transmembrane domains. As a proton-coupled divalent metal cation transporter, it is involved in defense against intracellular pathogens. Disease-causing mutation in Nramp1 occurring at glycine 169 located within the fourth transmembrane domain (TM4) suggests functional importance of this domain. In this paper, we study the three-dimensional structures of a peptide, corresponding to the TM4 of the wild-type Nramp1, in SDS micelles and 2, 2, 2-trifluoroethanol solvent using CD and NMR spectroscopies. We have found that an alpha-helix is predominantly induced in membrane-mimetic environments and the folding of the C-terminal residues is regulated by pH in SDS micelles. The peptide is embedded in SDS micelles and self-associated by coiled-coil interactions. The helix of the peptide in TFE is lengthened towards the N-terminus compared with those in SDS micelles at acidic pH and the self-association of the peptide is also observed in TFE. The fact that Mn(2+) ions are accessible to Asp-14 located in the interior of SDS micelles is found and the binding affinity is increased with increasing pH. The self-association of the peptide may provide a path by which Mn(2+) ions pass through the membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Divalent metal transporter (DMT1) belongs to the family of Nramp proteins. The fourth transmembrane domain (TM4) housing the disease-causing mutations both in Nramp1 and Nramp2 at the conserved two adjacent glycine residues, was implicated to serve an important biological function. In the present study, we have characterized structurally and topologically a 32-mer synthetic peptide, corresponding to the sequence of the loop 3 and the fourth transmembrane domain of rat DMT1 in membrane-mimetic environments (e.g. TFE, SDS micelles) using both CD and NMR spectroscopic techniques. Solution structures derived from NMR and molecular dynamic/simulated annealing calculation demonstrated that the peptide exhibits a highly defined -helice in the middle portion of the peptide, flanked by a highly flexible N-terminus and a relatively ordered C-terminus. Paramagnetic broadening on peptide signals by spin-labels and Mn2+ suggested that both the N-terminus and helical core of the peptide were embedded into the SDS micelles. The peptide exhibited amphipathic characteristics, with hydrophilic residues (Thr189, Asp192, Thr193 and Asp200) lying in one side of the helix which provides a basis for the formation of water-filled channel architectures through self-associations. Diffusion-ordered spectroscopy (DOSY) indicated that the peptide exhibits mixtures of hexamers, trimers and monomers, in contrast to the fourth transmembrane peptide (24-mer) being aggregated as a trimer only. This appears to be the first report on the effects of loops on aggregation behavior of transmembrane domains in membrane-mimetic environments.  相似文献   

19.
Nramp1 (natural resistance-associated macrophage protein 1) is an integral membrane protein with 12 putative transmembrane domains. As a proton-coupled divalent metal cation transporter, it is involved in defense against intracellular pathogens. Disease-causing mutation in Nramp1 occurring at glycine 169 located within the fourth transmembrane domain (TM4) suggests functional importance of this domain. In this paper, we study the three-dimensional structures of a peptide, corresponding to the TM4 of the wild-type Nramp1, in SDS micelles and 2, 2, 2-trifluoroethanol solvent using CD and NMR spectroscopies. We have found that an α-helix is predominantly induced in membrane-mimetic environments and the folding of the C-terminal residues is regulated by pH in SDS micelles. The peptide is embedded in SDS micelles and self-associated by coiled-coil interactions. The helix of the peptide in TFE is lengthened towards the N-terminus compared with those in SDS micelles at acidic pH and the self-association of the peptide is also observed in TFE. The fact that Mn2+ ions are accessible to Asp-14 located in the interior of SDS micelles is found and the binding affinity is increased with increasing pH. The self-association of the peptide may provide a path by which Mn2+ ions pass through the membrane.  相似文献   

20.
The receptor for the α-factor mating pheromone of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae consists of 431 amino acid residues and is a member of a family of membrane proteins predicted to have seven transmembrane helices. Fragments of the receptor corresponding to two of the transmembrane helices [residues 246–269 (M6) and 273–302 (M7)], two of the interhelical loops [residues 107–125 (E2) and 191–206 (E3)], and to a portion of the carboxyl terminus [residues 350–372 (CT)] were synthesized using solid-phase methodologies and purified to near homogeneity. CD was used to characterize the secondary structure of these peptides in trifluoroethanol (TFE), in TFE/water mixtures, in sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), and in the presence of dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) liposomes. In TFE, M6 and M7 exhibited CD spectra consistent with highly helical peptides, whereas CT was partially helical. In contrast, E2 and E3 were either disordered or aggregated in this solvent. M6 did not partition well into DMPC vesicles whereas M7 remained helical. Both M6 and M7 assumed helical conformations in 25 mM SDS. The loop neptides and the carboxyl terminus peptide were either in a β-structure or disordered in the presence of lipid. These findings represent the first biophysical evidence for conformations assumed by specific segments of the STE2 receptor protein. © 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

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