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Effect of Drastic Sequence Alteration andd-Amino Acid Incorporation on the Membrane Binding Behavior of Lytic Peptides

doi: 10.1021/bi049944h
pmid: 15157073
Effect of Drastic Sequence Alteration andd-Amino Acid Incorporation on the Membrane Binding Behavior of Lytic Peptides
The amphipathic alpha-helix is a common motif found in many cell lytic peptides including antimicrobial peptides. We have recently shown that significantly altering the amphipathic structure of a lytic peptide by reshuffling its sequence and/or replacing a few l-amino acids with their D-enantiomers did not significantly affect the antimicrobial activity of the peptides nor their ability to bind and permeate negatively charged (PE/PG) membranes. However, a pronounced effect was observed regarding their hemolytic activity and their ability to bind and permeate zwitterionic (PC/Cho) membranes. To shed light on these findings, here we used surface plasmon resonance (SPR) with mono- and bilayer membranes. We found that the L-amino acid (aa) peptides bound 10-25-fold stronger to PC/Cho bilayers compared with monolayers, whereas the diastereomers bound similarly to both membranes. A two-state reaction model analysis of the data indicated that this difference is due to the insertion of the L-aa peptides into the PC/Cho bilayers, whereas the diastereomers are surface-localized. In contrast, only an approximately 2-fold difference was found with negatively charged membranes. Changes in the amphipathicity markedly affected only the insertion of the L-aa peptides into PC/Cho bilayers. Furthermore, whereas the all-L-aa peptides bound similarly to the PC/Cho and PE/PG membranes, the diastereomers bound approximately 100-fold better to PE/PG compared with PC/Cho membranes, and selectivity was determined only in the first binding step. The effect of the peptides on the lipid order determined by using ATR-FTIR studies supported these findings. Besides shedding light on the mode of action of these peptides, the present study demonstrates SPR as a powerful tool to differentiate between non-cell-selective compared with bacteria-selective peptides, based on differences in their membrane binding behavior.
Phosphatidylethanolamines, Cell Membrane, Lipid Bilayers, Molecular Sequence Data, Phosphatidylglycerols, Stereoisomerism, Surface Plasmon Resonance, Structure-Activity Relationship, Cholesterol, Models, Chemical, Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared, Phosphatidylcholines, Amino Acid Sequence, Peptides, Phospholipids, Protein Binding
Phosphatidylethanolamines, Cell Membrane, Lipid Bilayers, Molecular Sequence Data, Phosphatidylglycerols, Stereoisomerism, Surface Plasmon Resonance, Structure-Activity Relationship, Cholesterol, Models, Chemical, Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared, Phosphatidylcholines, Amino Acid Sequence, Peptides, Phospholipids, Protein Binding
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