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1.
The basic effector domain of myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS), a major protein kinase C substrate, binds electrostatically to acidic lipids on the inner leaflet of the plasma membrane; interaction with Ca2+/calmodulin or protein kinase C phosphorylation reverses this binding. Our working hypothesis is that the effector domain of MARCKS reversibly sequesters a significant fraction of the L-alpha-phosphatidyl-D-myo-inositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) on the plasma membrane. To test this, we utilize three techniques that measure the ability of a peptide corresponding to its effector domain, MARCKS(151-175), to sequester PIP2 in model membranes containing physiologically relevant fractions (15-30%) of the monovalent acidic lipid phosphatidylserine. First, we measure fluorescence resonance energy transfer from Bodipy-TMR-PIP2 to Texas Red MARCKS(151-175) adsorbed to large unilamellar vesicles. Second, we detect quenching of Bodipy-TMR-PIP2 in large unilamellar vesicles when unlabeled MARCKS(151-175) binds to vesicles. Third, we identify line broadening in the electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of spin-labeled PIP2 as unlabeled MARCKS(151-175) adsorbs to vesicles. Theoretical calculations (applying the Poisson-Boltzmann relation to atomic models of the peptide and bilayer) and experimental results (fluorescence resonance energy transfer and quenching at different salt concentrations) suggest that nonspecific electrostatic interactions produce this sequestration. Finally, we show that the PLC-delta1-catalyzed hydrolysis of PIP2, but not binding of its PH domain to PIP2, decreases markedly as MARCKS(151-175) sequesters most of the PIP2.  相似文献   

2.
We have studied the binding of peptides containing both basic and aromatic residues to phospholipid vesicles. The peptides caveolin(92-101) and MARCKS(151-175) both contain five aromatic residues, but have 3 and 13 positive charges, respectively. Our results show the aromatic residues insert into the bilayer and anchor the peptides weakly to vesicles formed from the zwitterionic lipid phosphatidylcholine (PC). Incorporation of a monovalent acidic lipid (e.g., phosphatidylserine, PS) into the vesicles enhances the binding of both peptides via nonspecific electrostatic interactions. As predicted from application of the Poisson-Boltzmann equation to atomic models of the peptide and membranes, the enhancement is larger (e.g., 10(4)- vs 10-fold for 17% PS) for the more basic MARCKS(151-175). Replacing the five Phe with five Ala residues in MARCKS(151-175) decreases the binding to 10:1 PC/PS vesicles only slightly (6-fold). This result is also consistent with the predictions of our theoretical model: the loss of the attractive hydrophobic energy is partially compensated by a decrease in the repulsive Born/desolvation energy as the peptide moves away from the membrane surface. Incorporating multivalent phosphatidylinositol 4, 5-bisphosphate (PIP(2)) into PC vesicles produces dramatically different effects on the membrane binding of the two peptides: 1% PIP(2) enhances caveolin(92-101) binding only 3-fold, but increases MARCKS(151-175) binding 10(4)-fold. The strong interaction between the effector region of MARCKS and PIP(2) has interesting implications for the cellular function of MARCKS.  相似文献   

3.
Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) is a powerful experimental technique that in recent years has found numerous applications for studying biological phenomena. In this article, we scrutinize one of these applications, namely, FCS as a technique for studying leakage of fluorescent molecules from large unilamellar lipid vesicles. Specifically, we derive the mathematical framework required for using FCS to quantify leakage of fluorescent molecules from large unilamellar lipid vesicles, and we describe the appropriate methodology for successful completion of FCS experiments. By use of this methodology, we show that FCS can be used to accurately quantify leakage of fluorescent molecules from large unilamellar lipid vesicles, including leakage of fluorescent molecules of different sizes. To demonstrate the applicability of FCS, we have investigated the antimicrobial peptide mastoparan X. We show that mastoparan X forms transient transmembrane pores in POPC/POPG (3:1) vesicles, resulting in size-dependent leakage of molecules from the vesicles. We conclude the paper by discussing some of the advantages and limitations of FCS as compared to other existing methods to measure leakage from large unilamellar lipid vesicles.  相似文献   

4.
D Rapaport  M Danin  E Gazit  Y Shai 《Biochemistry》1992,31(37):8868-8875
A 24-amino acid peptide corresponding to the S4 segment of the sodium channel was synthesized. In order to perform fluorescence energy transfer measurements and to monitor the interaction of the peptide with lipid vesicles, the peptide was selectively labeled with fluorescence probes at either its N- or C-terminal amino acids. The fluorescent emission spectra of 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4- yl-(NBD-)labeled analogues displayed blue shifts upon binding to small unilamellar vesicles (SUV), reflecting the relocation of the fluorescent probe to an environment of increased apolarity. The results revealed that both the N- and C-terminus of the S4 segment are located within the lipid bilayer. Titration of solutions containing NBD-labeled peptides with SUV was used to generate binding isotherms, from which surface partition constants, in the range of 10(4) M-1, were derived. The shape of the binding isotherms as well as fluorescence energy transfer measurements suggest that aggregation of peptide monomers within the membrane readily occurs in acidic but not in zwitterionic vesicles. Furthermore, the results provide good correlation between the incidence of aggregation in PC/PS vesicles and the ability of the peptides to permeate the vesicle's membrane. However, a transmembrane diffusion potential had no detectable effect on the location of the peptide within the lipid bilayer or on its aggregation state.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Both the myristoylated alanine-rich protein kinase C substrate protein (MARCKS) and a peptide corresponding to its basic effector domain, MARCKS-(151-175), inhibit phosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C (PLC)-catalyzed hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP(2)) in vesicles (Glaser, M., Wanaski, S., Buser, C. A., Boguslavsky, V., Rashidzada, W., Morris, A., Rebecchi, M., Scarlata, S. F., Runnels, L. W., Prestwich, G. D., Chen, J., Aderem, A., Ahn, J., and McLaughlin, S. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 26187-26193). We report here that adding 10-100 nm MARCKS-(151-175) to a subphase containing either PLC-delta or -beta inhibits hydrolysis of PIP(2) in a monolayer and that this inhibition is due to the strong binding of the peptide to PIP(2). Two direct binding measurements, based on centrifugation and fluorescence, show that approximately 10 nm PIP(2), in the form of vesicles containing 0.01%, 0.1%, or 1% PIP(2), binds 50% of MARCKS-(151-175). Both electrophoretic mobility measurements and competition experiments suggest that MARCKS-(151-175) forms an electroneutral complex with approximately 4 PIP(2). MARCKS-(151-175) binds equally well to PI(4,5)P(2) and PI(3,4)P(2). Local electrostatic interactions of PIP(2) with MARCKS-(151-175) contribute to the binding energy because increasing the salt concentration from 100 to 500 mm decreases the binding 100-fold. We hypothesize that the effector domain of MARCKS can bind a significant fraction of the PIP(2) in the plasma membrane, and release the bound PIP(2) upon interaction with Ca(2+)/calmodulin or phosphorylation by protein kinase C.  相似文献   

6.
We describe a new approach to calculate the binding of flexible peptides and unfolded proteins to multicomponent lipid membranes. The method is based on the transfer matrix formalism of statistical mechanics recently described as a systematic tool to study DNA-protein-drug binding in gene regulation. Using the energies of interaction of the individual polymer segments with different membrane lipid species and the scaling corrections due to polymer looping, we calculate polymer adsorption characteristics and the degree of sequestration of specific membrane lipids. The method is applied to the effector domain of the MARCKS (myristoylated alanine rich C kinase substrate) protein known to be involved in signal transduction through membrane binding. The calculated binding constants of the MARCKS(151-175) peptide and a series of related peptides to mixed PC/PS/PIP2 membranes are in satisfactory agreement with in vitro experiments.  相似文献   

7.
The presence of charged lipids in the cell membrane constitutes the background for the interaction with numerous membrane proteins. As a result, the valence of the lipids plays an important role concerning their lateral organization in the membrane and therefore the very manner of this interaction. This present study examines this aspect, particularly regarding to the interaction of the anionic lipid DPPS with the highly basic charged effector domain of the MARCKS protein, examined in monolayer model systems. Film balance, fluorescence microscopy and X-ray reflection/diffraction measurements were used to study the behavior of DPPS in a mixture with DPPC for its dependance on the presence of MARCKS (151-175). In the mixed monolayer, both lipids are completely miscible therefore DPPS is incorporated in the ordered crystalline DPPC domains as well. The interaction of MARCKS peptide with the mixed monolayer leads to the formation of lipid/peptide clusters causing an elongation of the serine group of the DPPS up to 7? in direction to surface normal into the subphase. The large cationic charge of the peptide pulls out the serine group of the interface which simultaneously causes an elongation of the phosphodiester group of the lipid fraction too. The obtained results were used to compare the interaction of MARCKS peptide with the polyvalent PIP(2) in mixed monolayers. On this way we surprisingly find out, that the relative small charge difference of the anionic lipids causes a significant different interaction with MARCKS (151-175). The lateral arrangement of the anionic lipids depends on their charge values and determines the diffusion of the electrostatic binding clusters within the membrane.  相似文献   

8.
Several groups have observed that phosphorylation causes the MARCKS (Myristoylated Alanine-Rich C Kinase Substrate) protein to move off cell membranes and phospholipid vesicles. Our working hypothesis is that significant membrane binding of MARCKS requires both hydrophobic insertion of the N-terminal myristate into the bilayer and electrostatic association of the single cluster of basic residues in the protein with acidic lipids and that phosphorylation reverses this electrostatic association. Membrane binding measurements with myristoylated peptides and phospholipid vesicles show this hydrophobic moiety could, at best, barely attach proteins to plasma membranes. We report here membrane binding measurements with basic peptides that correspond to the phosphorylation domains of MARCKS and neuromodulin. Binding of these peptides increases sigmoidally with the percent acidic lipid in the phospholipid vesicle and can be described by a Gouy-Chapman/mass action theory that explains how electrostatics and reduction of dimensionality produce apparent cooperativity. The electrostatic affinity of the MARCKS peptide for membranes containing 10% acidic phospholipids (10(4) M-1 = chi/[P], where chi is the mole ratio of peptide bound to the outer monolayer of the vesicles and [P] is the concentration of peptide in the aqueous phase) is the same as the hydrophobic affinity of the myristate moiety for bilayer membranes. Phosphorylation decreases the affinity of the MARCKS peptide for membranes containing 15% acidic lipid about 1000-fold and produces a rapid (t1/2 < 30 s) dissociation of the peptide from phospholipid vesicles.  相似文献   

9.
Cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) have been extensively studied during the past decade, because of their ability to promote the cellular uptake of various cargo molecules, e.g., oligonucleotides and proteins. In a recent study of the uptake of several analogues of penetratin, Tat(48-60) and oligoarginine in live (unfixed) cells [Thorén et al. (2003) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 307, 100-107], it was found that both endocytotic and nonendocytotic uptake pathways are involved in the internalization of these CPPs. In the present study, the membrane interactions of some of these novel peptides, all containing a tryptophan residue to facilitate spectroscopic studies, are investigated. The peptides exhibit a strong affinity for large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) containing zwitterionic and anionic lipids, with binding constants decreasing in the order penetratin > R(7)W > TatP59W > TatLysP59W. Quenching studies using the aqueous quencher acrylamide and brominated lipids indicate that the tryptophan residues of the peptides are buried to a similar extent into the membrane, with an average insertion depth of approximately 10-11 A from the bilayer center. The membrane topology of the peptides was investigated using an assay based on resonance energy transfer between tryptophan and a fluorescently labeled lysophospholipid, lysoMC, distributed asymmetrically in the membranes of LUVs. By determination of the energy transfer efficiency when peptide was added to vesicles with lysoMC present exclusively in the inner leaflet, it was shown that none of the peptides investigated is able to translocate across the lipid membranes of LUVs. By contrast, confocal laser scanning microscopy studies on carboxyfluorescein-labeled peptides showed that all of the peptides rapidly traverse the membranes of giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs). The choice of model system is thus crucial for the conclusions about the ability of CPPs to translocate across lipid membranes. Under the conditions used in the present study, peptide-lipid interactions alone cannot explain the different cellular uptake characteristics exhibited by these peptides.  相似文献   

10.
11.
A fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS)-based competitive binding assay to screen fragment-size compounds that weakly and slowly inhibit protein-peptide interactions was established. The interactions were detected by the increased diffusion time of a fluorescently labeled peptide probe after binding to its interacting protein. We analyzed the interactions between the c-Cbl TKB domain and phosphopeptides derived from ZAP-70, APS, and EGFR with the FCS assay and obtained 6 hit fragments that bound to the c-Cbl interaction sites. The binding amounts of the fragments were measured by direct binding measurements using surface plasmon resonance, and 5 fragments were found to bind selectively. The effect of 2 of the 5 fragments on the interaction with c-Cbl and the peptide exhibited strong time dependency. Furthermore, the inhibition by the selected 5 fragments on the protein-peptide interaction was confirmed by their effect on pull-down assays of c-Cbl with the biotin-conjugated interaction peptides. These results indicate the advantage of our FCS-based assay to study the time-dependent binding of compounds to their target protein.  相似文献   

12.
K Victor  J Jacob  D S Cafiso 《Biochemistry》1999,38(39):12527-12536
Basic residues are known to play a critical role in the attachment of protein domains to membrane interfaces. Many of these domains also contain hydrophobic residues that may alter the binding and the position of the domain on the interface. In the present study, the role of phenylanine in determining the membrane position, dynamics and free energy of a peptide derived from the effector domain of the myristoylated alanine-rich C-kinase substrate (MARCKS) protein was examined. Deuterium NMR in membranes containing phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylserine (PS) indicates that this peptide, MARCKS(151-175), partially penetrates the membrane interface when bound and alters the effective charge density on the membrane interface by approximately 2 charges per bound peptide. However, a derivative of this peptide in which the five phenylalanines are replaced by alanine, MARCKS-Ala, does not penetrate the interface when membrane-bound. This result was confirmed by depth measurements by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy on several spin-labeled derivatives of the Phe-less derivative. In contrast to nitroxides on MARCKS(151-175), nitroxides on the derivative lacking Phe do not reside within the bilayer but are in the aqueous phase when the peptide is bound to the membrane. The Phe to Ala substitutions shift the position of the labeled side chains by approximately 10-15 A. The side-chain dynamics of MARCKS-Ala are strongly influenced by membrane charge density and indicate that this peptide is drawn closer to the membrane interface at higher charge densities. As expected, MARCKS-Ala binds more weakly to membranes composed of PS/PC (1:9) than does the native MARCKS peptide; however, each phenylalanine contributes only 0.2 kcal/mol to the binding energy difference, far less than the 1.3 kcal/mol expected for the binding of phenylalanine to the membrane interface. This energetic discrepancy and the differences in membrane position of these peptides can be accounted for by a dehydration energy that is encountered as the peptide approaches the membrane interface. This energy likely includes a Born repulsion acting between the charged peptide and the low dielectric membrane interior. The interplay between the long-range attractive Coulombic force, the short-range repulsive force and the hydrophobic effect controls the position and energetics of protein domains on acidic membrane interfaces.  相似文献   

13.
We synthesized cyclic disulfide-bonded (i, i+4) peptides with various net positive charges (+2-+5) from linear peptides derived from the alpha helical domain of Tenecin 1, an insect defensin, and investigated the effect of the intradisulfide bridge (i, i+4) on hydrophobicity, secondary structure, leakage activity and binding activity for large unilamellar vesicles, antimicrobial activity, and hemolytic activity. Intradisulfide bridge formation of the peptides resulted in the increase of amphiphilicity and hydrophobicity. Cyclic forms of the peptides did not deeply penetrate into PG/PC (1:1, mole ratio) large unilamellar vesicles and had a decreased lipid membrane perturbation activity for PG/PC LUVs. When the peptides interacted with PG/CL (2:1, mole ratio) LUVs, cyclic peptides with a high net positive charge (+4-+5) showed similar binding affinities and leakage activities for vesicles to those of linear forms, whereas cyclic peptides with a low net positive charge (+2-+3) exhibited lower leakage activity than their linear forms. CD spectra indicate that the intradisulfide bridge (i, i+4) provided little conformational constraint to linear peptides in buffer solution but resulted in the decrease of alpha helicity of the peptides in lipid membrane mimic conditions. The cyclic peptide with the highest net positive charge had a similar antibacterial activity to that of the linear peptide, whereas the cyclic peptides with a low net positive charge (+3-+4) exhibited lower antibacterial activity than their linear forms. The cyclic peptides of an appropriate net charge showed more potent activities against some bacteria than those of linear forms under high salt conditions.  相似文献   

14.
F Nicol  S Nir    F C Szoka  Jr 《Biophysical journal》1996,71(6):3288-3301
The effect of cholesterol on the bilayer partitioning of the peptide GALA (WEAALAEALAEALAEHLAEALAEALEALAA) and its assembly into a pore in large unilamellar vesicles composed of neutral and negatively charged phospholipids has been determined. GALA undergoes a conformational change from a random coil to an amphipathic alpha-helix when the pH is reduced from 7.0 to 5.0, inducing at low pH leakage of contents from vesicles. Leakage from neutral or negatively charged vesicles at pH 5.0 was similar and could be adequately explained by the mathematical model (Parente, R. A., S. Nir, and F. C. Szoka, Jr., 1990. Mechanism of leakage of phospholipid vesicle contents induced by the peptide GALA. Biochemistry. 29:8720-8728) which assumed that GALA becomes incorporated into the vesicle bilayer and irreversibly aggregates to form a pore consisting of 10 +/- 2 peptides. Increasing cholesterol content in the membranes resulted in a reduced efficiency of the peptide to induce leakage. Part of the cholesterol effect was due to reduced binding of the peptide to cholesterol-containing membranes. An additional effect of cholesterol was to increase reversibility of surface aggregation of the peptide in the membrane. Results could be explained and predicted with a model that retains the same pore size, i.e., 10 +/- 2 peptides, but includes reversible aggregation of the monomers to form the pore. Resonance energy transfer experiments using fluorescently labeled peptides confirmed that the degree of reversibility of surface aggregation of GALA was significantly larger in cholesterol-containing liposomes, thus reducing the efficiency of pore formation.  相似文献   

15.
The antimicrobial peptide nisin exerts its activity by a unique dual mechanism. It permeates the cell membranes of Gram-positive bacteria by binding to the cell wall precursor Lipid II and inhibits cell wall synthesis. Binding of nisin to Lipid II induces the formation of large nisin-Lipid II aggregates in the membrane of bacteria as well as in Lipid II-doped model membranes. Mechanistic details of the aggregation process and its impact on membrane permeation are still unresolved. In our experiments, we found that fluorescently labeled nisin bound very inhomogeneously to bacterial membranes as a consequence of the strong aggregation due to Lipid II binding. A correlation between cell membrane damage and nisin aggregation was observed in vivo. To further investigate the aggregation process of Lipid II and nisin, we assessed its dynamics by single-molecule microscopy of fluorescently labeled Lipid II molecules in giant unilamellar vesicles using light-sheet illumination. We observed a continuous reduction of Lipid II mobility due to a steady growth of nisin-Lipid II aggregates as a function of time and nisin concentration. From the measured diffusion constants of Lipid II, we estimated that the largest aggregates contained tens of thousands of Lipid II molecules. Furthermore, we observed that the formation of large nisin-Lipid II aggregates induced vesicle budding in giant unilamellar vesicles. Thus, we propose a membrane permeation mechanism that is dependent on the continuous growth of nisin-Lipid II aggregation and probably involves curvature effects on the membrane.  相似文献   

16.
Fluorescent correlation spectroscopy (FCS) was used to measure binding affinities of ligands to ligates that are expressed by phage-display technology. Using this method we have quantified the binding of the 14-3-3 signaling protein to artificial peptide ligand. As a ligand we used the R18 artificial peptide expressed as a fusion in the cpIII coat protein that is present in 3 to 5 copies in an M13 phage. Comparisons of binding affinities were made with free R18 ligands using FCS. The result showed a relatively high binding affinity for the phage-displayed R18 peptide compared with binding to free fluorescently labeled R18. Quantification was supported by titration of the phage numbers using atomic force microscopy (AFM). AFM was shown to accurately determine phage numbers in solution as a good alternative for electron microscopy. It was shown to give reliable data that correlated perfectly with those of the viable phage numbers determined by classical bacterial infection studies. In conclusion, a very fast and sensitive method for the selection of new peptide ligands or ligates based on a quantitative assay in solution has been developed.  相似文献   

17.
There are clusters of basic amino acids on many cytoplasmic proteins that bind transiently to membranes (e.g., protein kinase C) as well as on the cytoplasmic domain of many intrinsic membrane proteins (e.g., glycophorin). To explore the possibility that these basic residues bind electrostatically to monovalent acidic lipids, we studied the binding of the peptides Lysn and Argn (n = 1-5) to bilayer membranes containing phosphatidylserine (PS) or phosphatidylglycerol (PG). We made electrophoretic mobility measurements using multilamellar vesicles, fluorescence and equilibrium binding measurements using large unilamellar vesicles, and surface potential measurements using monolayers. None of the peptides bound to vesicles formed from the zwitterionic lipid phosphatidylcholine (PC) but all bound to vesicles formed from PC/PS or PC/PG mixtures. None of the peptides exhibited specificity between PS and PG. Each lysine residue that was added to Lys2 decreased by one order of magnitude the concentration of peptide required to reverse the charge on the vesicle; equivalently it increased by one order of magnitude the binding affinity of the peptides for the PS vesicles. The simplest explanation is that each added lysine binds independently to a separate PS with a microscopic association constant of 10 M-1 or a free energy of approximately 1.4 kcal/mol. Similar, but not identical, results were obtained with the Argn peptides. A simple theoretical model combines the Gouy-Chapman theory (which accounts for the nonspecific electrostatic accumulation of the peptides in the aqueous diffuse double layer adjacent to the membrane) with mass action equations (which account for the binding of the peptides to greater than 1 PS). This model can account qualitatively for the dependence of binding on both the number of basic residues in the peptides and the mole fraction of PS in the membrane.  相似文献   

18.
P Schwille  J Korlach  W W Webb 《Cytometry》1999,36(3):176-182
We report on the successful application of fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) to the analysis of single fluorescently labeled lipid analogue molecules diffusing laterally in lipid bilayers, as exemplified by time traces of fluorescence bursts of individual molecules entering and leaving the excitation area. FCS measurements performed on lipid probes in rat basophilic leukemia cell membranes showed deviations from two-dimensional Brownian motion with a single uniform diffusion constant. Giant unilamellar vesicles were employed as model systems to characterize diffusion of fluorescent lipid analogues in both homogeneous and mixed lipid phases with diffusion heterogeneity. Comparing the results of cell membrane diffusion with the findings on the model systems suggests possible explanations for the observations: (a) anomalous subdiffusion in which evanescent attractive interactions with disparate mobile molecules modifies the diffusion statistics; (b) alternatively, probe molecules are localized in microdomains of submicroscopic size, possibly in heterogeneous membrane phases.  相似文献   

19.
The acetylated and amidated hexapeptide FRWWHR (combi-2), previously identified by combinatorial chemistry methods, shows strong antimicrobial activity. The binding of the peptide to 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[(phospho-rac-(1-glycerol)] (POPG) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) vesicles was studied using fluorescence spectroscopy and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) with dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) multilamellar vesicles was performed to determine changes in the lipid phase behaviour upon binding the peptide. Two-dimensional proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, to solve the bound peptide structure, was performed in the presence of dodecylphosphatidylcholine (DPC) and sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) micelles. The fluorescence, ITC and DSC studies indicate that the peptide interacts preferentially with lipid vesicles containing negatively charged head groups. Conformational information determined using NMR indicate that the combi-2 peptide adopts a coiled amphipathic conformation when bound to SDS and DPC micelles. Leakage assays indicate that the peptide is not very efficient at causing leakage from calcein-filled large unilamellar vesicles comprised of POPG/POPC (1 : 1). The rapid passage of either the fluorescent-tagged peptides combi-2 or the previously studied peptide Ac-RRWWRF-NH(2) (combi-1) into Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus suggests that instead of membrane disruption, the main bactericidal site of action of these peptides might be located inside bacteria.  相似文献   

20.
Nicol F  Nir S  Szoka FC 《Biophysical journal》1999,76(4):2121-2141
We determined the orientation of a biotinylated version of the pore-forming peptide GALA (WEAALAEALAEALAEHLAEALAEALEALAA) at pH 5.0 in large unilamellar phosphatidylcholine vesicles, using the enhancement of BODIPY-avidin fluorescence subsequent to its irreversible binding to a biotin moiety. GALA and its variants were biotinylated at the N- or C-terminus. BODIPY-avidin was either added externally or was pre-encapsulated in vesicles to assess the fraction of liposome-bound biotinylated GALA that exposed its labeled terminus to the external or internal side of the bilayer, respectively. Under conditions where most of the membrane-bound peptides were involved in transmembrane aggregates and formed aqueous pores (at a lipid/bound peptide molar ratio of 2500/1), the head-to-tail (N- to C-terminus) orientation of the membrane-inserted peptides was such that 3/4 of the peptides exposed their N-terminus on the inside of the vesicle and their C-terminus on the outside. Under conditions resulting in reduced pore formation (at higher lipid/peptide molar ratios), we observed an increase in the fraction of GALA termini exposed to the outside of the vesicle. These results are consistent with a model (Parente et al., Biochemistry, 29:8720, 1990) that requires a critical number of peptides (M) in an aggregate to form a transbilayer structure. When the peptides form an aggregate of size i, with i < M = 4 to 6, the orientation of the peptides is mostly parallel to the membrane surface, such that both termini of the biotinylated peptide are exposed to external BODIPY-avidin. This BODIPY-avidin/biotin binding assay should be useful to determine the orientation of other membrane-interacting molecules.  相似文献   

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