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1.
Supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) are popular models of cell membranes with potential biotechnological applications and an understanding of the mechanisms of SLB formation is now emerging. Here we characterize, by combining atomic force microscopy, quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring, and ellipsometry, the formation of SLBs on mica from sonicated unilamellar vesicles using mixtures of zwitterionic, negatively and positively charged lipids. The results are compared with those we reported previously on silica. As on silica, electrostatic interactions were found to determine the pathway of lipid deposition. However, fundamental differences in the stability of surface-bound vesicles and the mobility of SLB patches were observed, and point out the determining role of the solid support in the SLB-formation process. The presence of calcium was found to have a much more pronounced influence on the lipid deposition process on mica than on silica. Our results indicate a specific calcium-mediated interaction between dioleoylphosphatidylserine molecules and mica. In addition, we show that the use of PLL-g-PEG modified tips considerably improves the AFM imaging of surface-bound vesicles and bilayer patches and evaluate the effects of the AFM tip on the apparent size and shape of these soft structures.  相似文献   

2.
Annexin A5 is a protein that binds to membranes containing negatively charged phospholipids in a calcium-dependent manner. We previously found that annexin A5 self-assembles into two-dimensional (2D) crystals on supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) formed on mica while a monolayer of disordered trimers is formed on SLBs on silica. Here, we investigated in detail and correlated the adsorption kinetics of annexin A5 on SLBs, supported on silica and on mica, with the protein's 2D self-assembly behavior. For this study, quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring and ellipsometry were combined with atomic force microscopy. We find, in agreement with previous studies, that the adsorption behavior is strongly dependent on the concentration of dioleoylphosphatidylserine (DOPS) in the SLB and the calcium concentration in solution. The adsorption kinetics of annexin A5 are similar on silica-SLBs and on mica-SLBs, when taking into account the difference in accessible DOPS between silica-SLBs and mica-SLBs. In contrast, 2D crystals of annexin A5 form readily on mica-SLBs, even at low protein coverage (< or =10%), whereas they are not found on silica-SLBs, except in a narrow range close to maximal coverage. These results enable us to construct the phase diagram for the membrane binding and the states of 2D organization of annexin A5. The protein binds to the membrane in two different fractions, one reversible and the other irreversible, at a given calcium concentration. The adsorption is determined by the interaction of protein monomers with the membrane. We propose that the local membrane environment, as defined by the presence of DOPS, DOPC, and calcium ions, controls the adsorption and reversibility of protein binding.  相似文献   

3.
Supported lipid bilayers (SLB) are important for the study of membrane-based phenomena and as coatings for biosensors. Nevertheless, there is a fundamental lack of understanding of the process by which they form from vesicles in solution. We report insights into the mechanism of SLB formation by vesicle adsorption using temperature-controlled time-resolved fluorescence microscopy at low vesicle concentrations. First, lipid accumulates on the surface at a constant rate up to ∼0.8 of SLB coverage. Then, as patches of SLB nucleate and spread, the rate of accumulation increases. At a coverage of ∼1.5 × SLB, excess vesicles desorb as SLB patches rapidly coalesce into a continuous SLB. Variable surface fluorescence immediately before SLB patch formation argues against the existence of a critical vesicle density necessary for rupture. The accelerating rate of accumulation and the widespread, abrupt loss of vesicles coincide with the emergence and disappearance of patch edges. We conclude that SLB edges enhance vesicle adhesion to the surface and induce vesicle rupture, thus playing a key role in the formation of continuous SLB.  相似文献   

4.
Crotoxin, isolated from the venom of Crotalus durissus terrificus, is a potent neurotoxin consisting of a basic and weakly toxic phospholipase A2 subunit (component B) and an acidic nonenzymatic subunit (component A). The nontoxic component A enhances the toxicity of the phospholipase subunit by preventing its nonspecific adsorption. The binding of crotoxin and of its subunits to small unilamellar phospholipid vesicles was examined under experimental conditions that prevented any phospholipid hydrolysis. Isolated component B rapidly bound with a low affinity (Kapp in the millimolar range) to zwitterionic phospholipid vesicles and with a high affinity (Kapp of less than 1 microM) to negatively charged phospholipid vesicles. On the other hand, the crotoxin complex did not interact with zwitterionic phospholipid vesicles but dissociated in the presence of negatively charged phospholipid vesicles; the noncatalytic component A was released into solution, whereas component B remained tightly bound to lipid vesicles, with apparent affinity constants from 100 to less than 1 microM, according to the chemical composition of the phospholipids. On binding, crotoxin or its component B caused the leakage of a dye entrapped in vesicles of negatively charged but not of zwitterionic phospholipids. The selective binding of crotoxin suggests that negatively charged phospholipids may constitute a component of the acceptor site of crotoxin on the presynaptic plasma membrane.  相似文献   

5.
In order to mimic cell membranes, the supported lipid bilayer (SLB) is an attractive platform which enables in vitro investigation of membrane-related processes while conferring biocompatibility and biofunctionality to solid substrates. The spontaneous adsorption and rupture of phospholipid vesicles is the most commonly used method to form SLBs. However, under physiological conditions, vesicle fusion (VF) is limited to only a subset of lipid compositions and solid supports. Here, we describe a one-step general procedure called the solvent-assisted lipid bilayer (SALB) formation method in order to form SLBs which does not require vesicles. The SALB method involves the deposition of lipid molecules onto a solid surface in the presence of water-miscible organic solvents (e.g., isopropanol) and subsequent solvent-exchange with aqueous buffer solution in order to trigger SLB formation. The continuous solvent exchange step enables application of the method in a flow-through configuration suitable for monitoring bilayer formation and subsequent alterations using a wide range of surface-sensitive biosensors. The SALB method can be used to fabricate SLBs on a wide range of hydrophilic solid surfaces, including those which are intractable to vesicle fusion. In addition, it enables fabrication of SLBs composed of lipid compositions which cannot be prepared using the vesicle fusion method. Herein, we compare results obtained with the SALB and conventional vesicle fusion methods on two illustrative hydrophilic surfaces, silicon dioxide and gold. To optimize the experimental conditions for preparation of high quality bilayers prepared via the SALB method, the effect of various parameters, including the type of organic solvent in the deposition step, the rate of solvent exchange, and the lipid concentration is discussed along with troubleshooting tips. Formation of supported membranes containing high fractions of cholesterol is also demonstrated with the SALB method, highlighting the technical capabilities of the SALB technique for a wide range of membrane configurations.  相似文献   

6.
Silicon semiconductors with a thin surface layer of silica were first modified with polyelectrolytes (polyethyleneimine, polystyrene sulfonate and poly(allylamine)) via a facile layer-by-layer deposition approach. Subsequently, lipid vesicles were added to the preformed polymeric cushion, resulting in the adsorption of intact vesicles or fusion and lipid bilayer formation. To study involved interactions we employed optical reflectometry, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and fluorescent recovery after photobleaching. Three phospholipids with different charge of polar head groups, i.e. 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC), 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-l-serine (DOPS) and 1,2-dioleoyl-3-trimethylammonium-propane (DOTAP) were used to prepare vesicles with varying surface charge. We observed that only lipid vesicles composed from 1:1 (mole:mole) mixture of DOPC/DOPS have the ability to fuse onto an oppositely charged terminal layer of polyelectrolyte giving a lipid bilayer with a resistance of >100 kΩ. With optical reflectometry we found that the vesicle surface charge is directly related to the amount of mass adsorbed onto the surface. An interesting observation was that zwitterionic polar head groups of DOPC allow the adsorption on both positively and negatively charged surfaces. As found with fluorescent recovery after photobleaching, positively charged surface governed by the presence of poly(allylamine) as the terminal layer resulted in intact DOPC lipid vesicles adsorption whereas in the case of a negatively charged silica surface formation of lipid bilayers was observed, as expected from literature.  相似文献   

7.
Cha T  Guo A  Zhu XY 《Biophysical journal》2006,90(4):1270-1274
Electrostatic interaction is known to play important roles in the adsorption of charged lipids on oppositely charged surfaces. Here we show that, even for charge neutral (zwitterionic) lipids, electrostatic interaction is critical in controlling the adsorption and fusion of lipid vesicles to form supported phospholipid bilayers (SPBs) on surfaces. We use terminally functionalized alkanethiol self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) to systematically control the surface charge density. Charge neutral egg phophatidylcholine (eggPC) vesicles readily fuse into SPBs on either a positively charged 11-aminino-1-undecanethiol SAM or a negatively charged 10-carboxy-1-decanethiol SAM when the density of surface charge groups is > or = 80%. These processes depend critically on the buffer environment: fusion of adsorbed vesicles to form SPBs on each charged molecular surface does not occur when the molecular ion of the buffer used is of the opposite charge type. We attribute this to the high entropic repulsion (electric double layer repulsion) due to the large size of molecular counterions. On the other hand, such a critical dependence on buffer type is not observed when charged lipids are used. This study suggests the general importance of controlling electrostatic interaction in the formation of stable SPBs.  相似文献   

8.
Human-β-defensins HBD-1-3 are important components of the innate immune system. Synthetic peptides Phd-1-3 with a single disulphide bond, spanning the cationic C-terminal region of HBD-1-3, have antimicrobial activity. The interaction of Phd-1-3 with model membranes was investigated using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and steady-state fluorescence polarization to understand the biophysical basis for the mechanism of antimicrobial action. Calorimetric titration of POPE:POPG (7:3) vesicles with peptides at 25°C and 37°C showed complex profiles with two distinct regions of heat changes. The data indicate binding of Phd-1-3 at 37°C to both negative and zwitterionic lipid vesicles is exothermic with low enthalpy values (ΔH~-1.3 to -2.8kcal/mol) as compared to amphipathic helical antibacterial peptides. The adsorption of peptides to negatively charged lipid membranes is modulated by electrostatic interactions that are described by surface partition equilibrium model using Gouy-Chapman theory. However, this model could not explain the isotherms of peptide binding to zwitterionic lipid vesicles. Fluorescence polarization of TMA-DPH (1-[4-(trimethylammonio) phenyl]-6-phenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene) and DPH (1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene) located in the head group and acyl chain region respectively, indicates that the peptides interact with interfacial region of negatively charged membranes. Based on the results obtained, we conclude that adsorption of cationic peptides Phd-1-3 on lipid surface do not result in conformational change or pore formation. It is proposed that interaction of Phd-1-3 with the negatively charged lipid head group causes membrane destabilization, which in turn affects the efficient functioning of cytoplasmic membrane proteins in bacteria, resulting in cell death.  相似文献   

9.
The formation of supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) on glass from giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) was studied using fluorescence microscopy. We show that GUV rupture occurs by at least four mechanisms, including 1), spontaneous rupture of isolated GUVs yielding almost heart-shaped bilayer patches (asymmetric rupture); 2), spontaneous rupture of isolated GUVs yielding circular bilayer patches (symmetric rupture); 3), induced rupture of an incoming vesicle when it contacts a planar bilayer edge; and 4), induced rupture of an adsorbed GUV when a nearby GUV spontaneously ruptures. In pathway 1, the dominant rupture pathway for isolated GUVs, GUVs deformed upon adsorption to the glass surface, and planar bilayer patch formation was initiated by rupture pore formation near the rim of the glass-bilayer interface. Expanding rupture pores led to planar bilayer formation in approximately 10-20 ms. Rupture probability per unit time depended on the average intrinsic curvature of the component lipids. The membrane leaflet adsorbed to the glass surface in planar bilayer patches originated from the outer leaflet of GUVs. Pathway 2 was rarely observed. We surmise that SLB formation is predominantly initiated by pathway 1 rupture events, and that rupture events occurring by pathways 3 and 4 dominate during later stages of SLB formation.  相似文献   

10.
This paper describes the mechanisms of adsorption of chitosan, a positively charged polyelectrolyte, on the DOPC lipid membrane of large and giant unilamellar vesicles (respectively, LUVs and GUVs). We observe that the variation of the zeta potential of LUVs as a function of chitosan concentration is independent on the chitosan molecular weight (Mw). This result is interpreted in terms of electrostatic interactions, which induce a flat adsorption of the chitosan on the surface of the membrane. The role of electrostatic interactions is further studied by observing the variation of the zeta potential as a function of the chitosan concentration for two different charge densities tuned by the pH. Results show a stronger chitosan-membrane affinity at pH 6 (lipids are negatively charged, and 40% chitosan amino groups are protonated) than at pH 3.4 (100% of protonated amino groups but zwitterionic lipids are positively charged) which confirms that adsorption is of electrostatic origin. Then, we investigate the stability of decorated LUVs and GUVs in a large range of pH (6.0 < pH < 12.0) in order to complete a previous study made in acidic conditions [Quemeneur et al. Biomacromolecules 2007, 8, 2512-2519]. A comparative study of the variation of the zeta potential as a function of the pH (2.0 < pH < 12.0) reveals a difference in behavior between naked and chitosan-decorated LUVs. This result is further confirmed by a comparative observation by optical microscopy of naked and chitosan-decorated GUVs in basic conditions (6.0 < pH < 12.0): at pH > 10.0, in the absence of chitosan, the vesicles present complex shapes, contrary to the chitosan-decorated vesicles which remain spherical, confirming thus that chitosan remains adsorbed on vesicles in basic conditions up to pH = 12.0. These results, in addition with our previous data, show that the chitosan-decorated vesicles are stable over a very broad range of pH (2.0 < pH < 12.0), which holds promise for their in vivo applications. Finally, the quantification of the chitosan adsorption on a LUV membrane is performed by zeta potential and fluorescence measurements. The fraction of membrane surface covered by chitosan is estimated to be lower than 40 %, which corresponds to the formation of a flat layer of chitosan on the membrane surface on an electrostatic basis.  相似文献   

11.
Human-β-defensins HBD-1–3 are important components of the innate immune system. Synthetic peptides Phd-1–3 with a single disulphide bond, spanning the cationic C-terminal region of HBD-1–3, have antimicrobial activity. The interaction of Phd-1–3 with model membranes was investigated using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and steady-state fluorescence polarization to understand the biophysical basis for the mechanism of antimicrobial action. Calorimetric titration of POPE:POPG (7:3) vesicles with peptides at 25 °C and 37 °C showed complex profiles with two distinct regions of heat changes. The data indicate binding of Phd-1–3 at 37 °C to both negative and zwitterionic lipid vesicles is exothermic with low enthalpy values (ΔH ~ ? 1.3 to ? 2.8 kcal/mol) as compared to amphipathic helical antibacterial peptides. The adsorption of peptides to negatively charged lipid membranes is modulated by electrostatic interactions that are described by surface partition equilibrium model using Gouy–Chapman theory. However, this model could not explain the isotherms of peptide binding to zwitterionic lipid vesicles. Fluorescence polarization of TMA-DPH (1-[4-(trimethylammonio) phenyl]-6-phenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene) and DPH (1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene) located in the head group and acyl chain region respectively, indicates that the peptides interact with interfacial region of negatively charged membranes. Based on the results obtained, we conclude that adsorption of cationic peptides Phd-1–3 on lipid surface do not result in conformational change or pore formation. It is proposed that interaction of Phd-1–3 with the negatively charged lipid head group causes membrane destabilization, which in turn affects the efficient functioning of cytoplasmic membrane proteins in bacteria, resulting in cell death.  相似文献   

12.
Supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) are widely used as a model for studying membrane properties (phase separation, clustering, dynamics) and its interaction with other compounds, such as drugs or peptides. However SLB characteristics differ depending on the support used. Commonly used techniques for SLB imaging and measurements are single molecule fluorescence microscopy, FCS and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Because most optical imaging studies are carried out on a glass support, while AFM requires an extremely flat surface (generally mica), results from these techniques cannot be compared directly, since the charge and smoothness properties of these materials strongly influence diffusion. Unfortunately, the high level of manual dexterity required for the cutting and gluing thin slices of mica to the glass slide presents a hurdle to routine use of mica for SLB preparation. Although this would be the method of choice, such prepared mica surfaces often end up being uneven (wavy) and difficult to image, especially with small working distance, high numerical aperture lenses. Here we present a simple and reproducible method for preparing thin, flat mica surfaces for lipid vesicle deposition and SLB preparation. Additionally, our custom made chamber requires only very small volumes of vesicles for SLB formation. The overall procedure results in the efficient, simple and inexpensive production of high quality lipid bilayer surfaces that are directly comparable to those used in AFM studies.  相似文献   

13.
Hemolysin E (HlyE) is a 34 kDa protein toxin, recently isolated from a pathogenic strain of Escherichia coli, which is believed to exert its toxic activity via formation of pores in the target cell membrane. With the goal of understanding the involvement of different segments of hemolysin E in the membrane interaction and assembly of the toxin, a conserved, amphipathic leucine zipper-like motif has been identified. In order to evaluate the possible structural and functional roles of this segment in HlyE, a 30-residue peptide (H-205) corresponding to the leucine zipper motif (amino acid 205-234) and two mutant peptides of the same size were synthesized and labeled by fluorescent probes at their N termini. The results show that the wild-type H-205 binds to both zwitterionic (PC/Chol) and negatively charged (PC/PG/Chol) phospholipid vesicles and also self-assemble therein. Detailed membrane-binding experiments revealed that this synthetic motif (H-205) formed large aggregates and inserted into the bilayer of only negatively charged lipid vesicles but not of zwitterionic membrane. Although both the mutants bound to zwitterionic and negatively charged lipid vesicles, neither of them inserted into the lipid bilayers nor assembled in any of these lipid vesicles. Furthermore, H-205 adopted a significant helical structure in membrane mimetic environments and induced the permeation of monovalent ions and release of entrapped calcein across the phospholipid vesicles more efficiently than the mutant peptides. The results presented here indicate that this H-205 (amino acid 205-234) segment may be an important structural element in hemolysin E, which could play a significant role in the binding and assembly of the toxin in the target cell membrane and its destabilization.  相似文献   

14.
The energetics and partition of two hybrid peptides of cecropin A and melittin (CA(1-8)M(1-18) and CA(1-7)M(2-9)) with liposomes of different composition were studied by time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy, isothermal titration calorimetry, and surface plasmon resonance. The study was carried out with large unilamellar vesicles of three different lipid compositions: 1,2-dimyristoil-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC), 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-rac-(1-glycerol) (DMPG), and a 3:1 binary mixture of DMPC/DMPG in a wide range of peptide/lipid ratios. The results are compatible with a model involving a strong electrostatic surface interaction between the peptides and the negatively charged liposomes, giving rise to aggregation and precipitation. A correlation is observed in the calorimetric experiments between the observed events and charge neutralization for negatively charged and mixed membranes. In the case of zwitterionic membranes, a very interesting case study was obtained with the smaller peptide, CA(1-7)M(2-9). The calorimetric results obtained for this peptide in a large range of peptide/lipid ratios can be interpreted on the basis of an initial and progressive surface coverage until a threshold concentration, where the orientation changes from parallel to perpendicular to the membrane, followed by pore formation and eventually membrane disruption. The importance of negatively charged lipids on the discrimination between bacterial and eukaryotic membranes is emphasized.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The binding of penetratin, a peptide that has been found useful for cellular delivery of large hydrophilic molecules, to negatively charged vesicles was investigated. The surface charge density of the vesicles was varied by mixing zwitterionic dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) and negatively charged dioleoylphosphatidylglycerol (DOPG) at various molar ratios. The extent of membrane association was quantified from tryptophan emission spectra recorded during titration of peptide solution with liposomes. A singular value decomposition of the spectral data demonstrated unambiguously that two species, assigned as peptide free in solution and membrane-bound peptide, respectively, account for the spectral data of the titration series. Binding isotherms were then constructed by least-squares projection of the titration spectra on reference spectra of free and membrane-bound peptide. A model based on the Gouy-Chapman theory in combination with a two-state surface partition equilibrium, separating the electrostatic and the hydrophobic contributions to the binding free energy, was found to be in excellent agreement with the experimental data. Using this model, a surface partition constant of approximately 80 M(-)(1) was obtained for the nonelectrostatic contribution to the binding of penetratin irrespective of the fraction of negatively charged lipids in the membrane, indicating that the hydrophobic interactions are independent of the surface charge density. In accordance with this, circular dichroism measurements showed that the secondary structure of membrane-associated penetratin is independent of the DOPC/DOPG ratio. Experiments using vesicles with entrapped carboxyfluorescein showed that penetratin does not form membrane pores. Studies of the cationic peptide penetratin are complicated by extensive adsorption to surfaces of quartz and plastics. By modification of the quartz cell walls with the cationic polymer poly(ethylenimine), the peptide adsorption was reduced to a tolerable level. The data analysis method used for construction of the binding isotherms eliminated errors emanating from the remaining peptide adsorption, which otherwise would prevent a proper quantification of the binding.  相似文献   

17.
The molecular mode of action of the lipopeptide SF with zwitterionic and negatively charged model membranes has been investigated with solid-state NMR, light scattering, and electron microscopy. It has been found that this acidic lipopeptide (negatively charged) induces a strong destabilization of negatively charged micrometer-scale liposomes, leading to the formation of small unilamellar vesicles of a few 10s of nanometers. This transformation is detected for very low doses of SF (Ri = 200) and is complete for Ri = 50. The phenomenon has been observed for several membrane mixtures containing phosphatidylglycerol or phosphatidylserine. The vesicularization is not observed when the lipid negative charges are neutralized and a cholesterol-like effect is then evidenced, i.e., increase of gel membrane dynamics and decrease of fluid membrane microfluidity. The mechanism for small vesicle formation thus appears to be linked to severe changes in membrane curvature and could be described by a two-step action: 1), peptide insertion into membranes because of favorable van der Waals forces between the rather rigid cyclic and lipophilic part of SF and lipid chains and 2), electrostatic repulsion between like charges borne by lipid headgroups and the negatively charged SF amino acids. This might provide the basis for a novel mode of action of negatively charged lipopeptides.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) fusion peptide, corresponding to a sequence of 23 amino acid residues at the N-terminus of the spike transmembrane subunit gp41, has the capacity to destabilize negatively charged and neutral large unilamellar vesicles, representing, respectively, the acidic and the neutral fraction of the plasma membrane lipids of viral target cells. As revealed by infrared spectroscopy, the peptide associated with the vesicles may exist in different conformations. In negatively charged membranes the structure is mainly an α-helix, while in Ca2+-neutralized negatively charged membranes the conformation switches to a predominantly extended conformation. In membranes composed of zwitterionic phospholipids and cholesterol, the peptide also adopts a predominant extended structure. The α-helical structure permeabilizes negatively charged vesicles but does not induce membrane fusion. The peptide in β-type conformation, on the other hand, permeabilizes neutral membranes and triggers fusion. As seen by31P NMR, the latter structure also exhibits the capacity to alter the lamellar organization of the membrane.  相似文献   

19.
N Poklar  J Fritz  P Macek  G Vesnaver  T V Chalikian 《Biochemistry》1999,38(45):14999-15008
The interactions of equinatoxin II (EqTxII) with zwitterionic (DPPC) and anionic (DPPG) phospholipids and an equimolar mixture of the two phospholipids (DPPC/DPPG) have been investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), CD-spectropolarimetry, intrinsic emission fluorescence spectroscopy, and ultrasonic velocimetry. EqTxII binds to small unilamellar vesicles formed from negatively charged DPPG lipids, causing a marked reduction in the cooperativity and enthalpy of their gel/liquid-crystalline phase transition. This transition is completely abolished at a lipid-to-protein ratio, L/P, of 10. For the mixed DPPC/DPPG vesicles, a 2-fold greater lipid-to-protein ratio (L/P = 20) is required to abolish the phase transition, which corresponds to the same negative charge (-10) of lipid molecules per EqTxII molecule. The disappearance of the phase transition of the lipids apparently corresponds to the precipitation of the lipid-protein complex, as suggested by our sound velocity measurements. Based on the far-UV CD spectra, EqTxII undergoes two structural transitions in the presence of negatively charged vesicles (DPPG). The first transition coincides with the gel/liquid-crystalline phase transition of the lipids, which suggests that the liquid-crystalline form of negatively charged lipids triggers structural changes in EqTxII. The second transition involves the formation of alpha-helical structure. Based on these observations, we propose that, in addition to electrostatic interactions, hydrophobic interactions play an important role in EqTxII-membrane association.  相似文献   

20.
Certain amphiphilic copolymers form lipid-bilayer nanodiscs from artificial and natural membranes, thereby rendering incorporated membrane proteins optimal for structural analysis. Recent studies have shown that the amphiphilicity of a copolymer strongly determines its solubilization efficiency. This is especially true for highly negatively charged membranes, which experience pronounced Coulombic repulsion with polyanionic polymers. Here, we present a systematic study on the solubilization of artificial multicomponent lipid vesicles that mimic inner mitochondrial membranes, which harbor essential membrane-protein complexes. In particular, we compared the lipid-solubilization efficiencies of established anionic with less densely charged or zwitterionic and even cationic copolymers in low- and high-salt concentrations. The nanodiscs formed under these conditions were characterized by dynamic light scattering and negative-stain electron microscopy, pointing to a bimodal distribution of nanodisc diameters with a considerable fraction of nanodiscs engaging in side-by-side interactions through their polymer rims. Overall, our results show that some recent, zwitterionic copolymers are best suited to solubilize negatively charged membranes at high ionic strengths even at low polymer/lipid ratios.  相似文献   

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