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Structural and dynamical changes of the bindin B18 peptide upon binding to lipid membranes. A solid-state NMR study
Authors:Barré Patrick  Zschörnig Olaf  Arnold Klaus  Huster Daniel
Affiliation:Institute of Medical Physics and Biophysics, University of Leipzig, Germany.
Abstract:Structural and dynamical features of the B18 peptide from the sea urchin sperm binding protein were determined in the crystalline state and in zwitterionic lipid bilayers at a peptide:lipid molar ratio of 1:12 using solid-state NMR spectroscopy. The study was focused on three (13)C and (15)N uniformly labeled leucine residues, which were introduced into three different B18 peptides at positions evenly distributed along the B18 primary structure. Isotropic (13)C and (15)N chemical shift measurements showed that while B18 possesses a nonhelical and non-sheet-like structure in the crystalline state, the peptide adopts an oligomeric beta-sheet structure in the membrane in the presence of Zn(2+) ions at high peptide:lipid ratio. Torsion angle measurements for the three leucine sites supported these results, with phi torsion angles between -80 degrees and -90 degrees in the crystalline state and between -110 degrees and -120 degrees in the membrane-bound form. These phi torsion angles determined for membrane-bound B18 are consistent with a parallel beta-sheet secondary structure. Analysis of motionally averaged dipolar coupling measurements established an increase of the mobility in the leucine side chains upon binding to the membrane, whereas the backbone mobility remained essentially unchanged, except in the binding site of Zn(2+) ions. This difference in mobility was related to the H-bond network in the parallel beta-sheet structure, which involves the backbone and excludes the side chains of leucine residues. The parallel beta-sheet structure of B18 in the membrane in the presence of Zn(2+) appears to be an active state for the fusion of zwitterionic membranes in the presence of Zn(2+). A fluorescence fusion assay indicated that high B18 concentrations are required to induce fusion in these systems. Therefore, it was hypothesized that the oligomeric beta-sheet secondary structure revealed in the study represents an active state of the peptide in a membrane environment during fusion.
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