De novo design of a peptide which partitions between water and phospholipid bilayers as a monomeric alpha-helix (original) (raw)

Studies of the Minimum Hydrophobicity of α-Helical Peptides Required To Maintain a Stable Transmembrane Association with Phospholipid Bilayer Membranes †

Biochemistry, 2007

The effects of the hydrophobicity and the distribution of hydrophobic residues on the surfaces of some designed α-helical transmembrane peptides (acetyl-K 2 -L m -A n -K 2 -amide, where m + n = 24) on their solution behavior and interactions with phospholipids were examined. We find that although these peptides exhibit strong α-helix forming propensities in water, membrane-mimetic media, and lipid model membranes, the stability of the helices decreases as the Leu content decreases. Also, their binding to reversed phase high-performance liquid chromatography columns is largely determined by their hydrophobicity and generally decreases with decreases in the Leu/ Ala ratio. However, the retention of these peptides by such columns is also affected by the distribution of hydrophobic residues on their helical surfaces, being further enhanced when peptide helical hydrophobic moments are increased by clustering hydrophobic residues on one side of the helix. This clustering of hydrophobic residues also increases peptide propensity for self-aggregation in aqueous media and enhances partitioning of the peptide into lipid bilayer membranes. We also find that the peptides LA 3 LA 2 [acetyl-K 2 -(LAAALAA) 3 LAA-K 2 -amide] and particularly LA 6 [acetyl-K 2 -(LAAAAAA) 3 LAA-K 2 -amide] associate less strongly with and perturb the thermotropic phase behavior of phosphatidylcholine bilayers much less than peptides with higher L/A ratios. These results are consistent with free energies calculated for the partitioning of these peptides between water and phospholipid bilayers, which suggest that LA 3 LA 2 has an equal tendency to partition into water and into the hydrophobic core of phospholipid model membranes, whereas LA 6 should strongly prefer the aqueous phase. We conclude that for α-helical peptides of this type, Leu/Ala ratios of greater than 7/17 are required for stable transmembrane associations with phospholipid bilayers.

Sensitivity of Single Membrane-Spanning α-Helical Peptides to Hydrophobic Mismatch with a Lipid Bilayer: Effects on Backbone Structure, Orientation, and Extent of Membrane Incorporation

Biochemistry, 2001

The extent of matching of membrane hydrophobic thickness with the hydrophobic length of transmembrane protein segments potentially constitutes a major director of membrane organization. Therefore, the extent of mismatch that can be compensated, and the types of membrane rearrangements that result, can provide valuable insight into membrane functionality. In the present study, a large family of synthetic peptides and lipids is used to investigate a range of mismatch situations. Peptide conformation, orientation, and extent of incorporation are assessed by infrared spectroscopy, tryptophan fluorescence, circular dichroism, and sucrose gradient centrifugation. It is shown that peptide backbone structure is not significantly affected by mismatch, even when the extent of mismatch is large. Instead, this study demonstrates that for tryptophan-flanked peptides the dominant response of a membrane to large mismatch is that the extent of incorporation is reduced, when the peptide is both too short and too long. With increasing mismatch, a smaller fraction of peptide is incorporated into the lipid bilayer, and a larger fraction is present in extramembranous aggregates. Relatively long peptides that remain incorporated in the bilayer have a small tilt angle with respect to the membrane normal. The observed effects depend on the nature of the flanking residues: long tryptophan-flanked peptides do not associate well with thin bilayers, while equisized lysine-flanked peptides associate completely, thus supporting the notion that tryptophan and lysine interact differently with membrane-water interfaces. The different properties that aromatic and charged flanking residues impart on transmembrane protein segments are discussed in relation to protein incorporation in biological systems.

Structural investigations of basic amphipathic model peptides in the presence of lipid vesicles studied by circular dichroism, fluorescence, monolayer and modeling

Biochimica Et Biophysica Acta-biomembranes, 1998

A cationic amphiphilic peptide made of 10 leucine and 10 lysine residues, and four of its fluorescent derivatives in which leucines were substituted by Trp residues at different locations on the primary sequence have been synthesized. The interactions of these five peptides with neutral anionic or cationic vesicles were investigated using circular dichroism, steady state and time-resolved fluorescence with a combination of Trp quenching by brominated lipid probes, monolayers, modeling with minimization and simulated annealing procedures. We show that all the five peptides interact with neutral and anionic DMPC, DMPG, DOPC or egg yolk PC vesicles. The binding takes place whatever the peptide conformation in solution is. In the case of DMPC bilayers the binding free energy DG is estimated at y8 kcal mole y1 and the number of phospholipid molecules involved is about 20-25 per peptide molecule. Peptides are bound as single-stranded a helices orientated parallel to the bilayer surface. In the anchoring of phospholipid head groups around the peptides, the lipid molecules are not smeared out in a plane parallel to the membrane surface but are organized around the hydrophilic face of the a helices like 'wheat grains around an ear' and protrude outside the bilayer towards the solvent. We suggest that such a lipid arrangement generates transient structural defects responsible for the membrane permeability enhancement. When an electrical potential is applied, the axis of the peptide helices remains parallel to the membrane surface and does not reorient to give rise to a bundle of helix monomers that forms transmembrane channels via a 'barrel stave' mechanism. The penetration depth of a helices in relation to the position of phosphorus atoms in the unperturbed lipid leaflet is estimated at 3.2 A. q

Peptides with the same composition, hydrophobicity, and hydrophobic moment bind to phospholipid bilayers with different affinities

The journal of physical chemistry. B, 2014

We investigated the dependence of membrane binding on amino acid sequence for a series of amphipathic peptides derived from δ-lysin. δ-Lysin is a 26 amino acid, N-terminally formylated, hemolytic peptide that forms an amphipathic α-helix bound at membrane-water interfaces. A shortened peptide, lysette, was derived from δ-lysin by deletion of the four N-terminal amino acid residues. Five variants of lysette were synthesized by altering the amino acid sequence such that the overall hydrophobic moment remained essentially the same for all peptides. Peptide-lipid equilibrium dissociation constants and helicities of peptides bound to zwitterionic lipid vesicles were determined by stopped-flow fluorescence and circular dichroism. We found that binding to phosphatidylcholine bilayers was a function of the helicity of the bound peptide alone and independent of the a priori hydrophobic moment or the ability to form intramolecular salt bridges. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations on two of th...

General aspects of peptide selectivity towards lipid bilayers and cell membranes studied by variation of the structural parameters of amphipathic helical model peptides

Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes, 2002

Model compounds of modified hydrophobicity (H), hydrophobic moment (W) and angle subtended by charged residues (x) were synthesized to define the general roles of structural motifs of cationic helical peptides for membrane activity and selectivity. The peptide sets were based on a highly hydrophobic, non-selective KLA model peptide with high antimicrobial and hemolytic activity. Variation of the investigated parameters was found to be a suitable method for modifying peptide selectivity towards either neutral or highly negatively charged lipid bilayers. H and W influenced selectivity preferentially via modification of activity on 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) bilayers, while the size of the polar/hydrophobic angle affected the activity against 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidyl-DL-glycerol (POPG). The influence of the parameters on the activity determining step was modest in both lipid systems and the activity profiles were the result of the parameters' influence on the second less pronounced permeabilization step. Thus, the activity towards POPC vesicles was determined by the high permeabilizing efficiency, however, changes in the structural parameters preferentially influenced the relatively moderate affinity. In contrast, intensive peptide accumulation via electrostatic interactions was sufficient for the destabilization of highly negatively charged POPG lipid membranes, but changes in the activity profile, as revealed by the modification of x, seem to be preferentially caused by variation of the low permeabilizing efficiency. The parameters proved very effective also in modifying antimicrobial and hemolytic activity. However, their influence on cell selectivity was limited. A threshold value of hydrophobicity seems to exist which restricted the activity modifying potential of W and x on both lipid bilayers and cell membranes.

Structures and mode of membrane interaction of a short α helical lytic peptide and its diastereomer determined by NMR, FTIR, and fluorescence spectroscopy

European Journal of Biochemistry, 2002

The interaction of many lytic cationic antimicrobial peptides with their target cells involves electrostatic interactions, hydrophobic effects, and the formation of amphipathic secondary structures, such as a helices or b sheets. We have shown in previous studies that incorporating % 30% D-amino acids into a short a helical lytic peptide composed of leucine and lysine preserved the antimicrobial activity of the parent peptide, while the hemolytic activity was abolished. However, the mechanisms underlying the unique structural features induced by incorporating D-amino acids that enable short diastereomeric antimicrobial peptides to preserve membrane binding and lytic capabilities remain unknown. In this study, we analyze in detail the structures of a model amphipathic a helical cytolytic peptide KLLLKWLL KLLK-NH 2 and its diastereomeric analog and their interactions with zwitterionic and negatively charged membranes. Calculations based on high-resolution NMR experiments in dodecylphosphocholine (DPCho) and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles yield three-dimensional structures of both peptides. Structural analysis reveals that the peptides have an amphipathic organization within both membranes. Specifically, the a helical structure of the L-type peptide causes orientation of the hydrophobic and polar amino acids onto separate surfaces, allowing interactions with both the hydrophobic core of the membrane and the polar head group region. Significantly, despite the absence of helical structures, the diastereomer peptide analog exhibits similar segregation between the polar and hydrophobic surfaces. Further insight into the membranebinding properties of the peptides and their depth of penetration into the lipid bilayer has been obtained through tryptophan quenching experiments using brominated phospholipids and the recently developed lipid/polydiacetylene (PDA) colorimetric assay. The combined NMR, FTIR, fluorescence, and colorimetric studies shed light on the importance of segregation between the positive charges and the hydrophobic moieties on opposite surfaces within the peptides for facilitating membrane binding and disruption, compared to the formation of a helical or b sheet structures.

The Topology of Lysine-Containing Amphipathic Peptides in Bilayers by Circular Dichroism, Solid-State NMR, and Molecular Modeling

Biophysical Journal, 2000

In order to better understand the driving forces that determine the alignment of amphipathic helical polypeptides with respect to the surface of phospholipid bilayers, lysine-containing peptide sequences were designed, prepared by solid-phase chemical synthesis, and reconstituted into membranes. CD spectroscopy indicates that all peptides exhibit a high degree of helicity in the presence of SDS micelles or POPC small unilamellar vesicles. Proton-decoupled 31 P-NMR solid-state NMR spectroscopy demonstrates that in the presence of peptides liquid crystalline phosphatidylcholine membranes orient well along glass surfaces. The orientational distribution and dynamics of peptides labeled with 15 N at selected sites were investigated by proton-decoupled 15 N solid-state NMR spectroscopy. Polypeptides with a single lysine residue adopt a transmembrane orientation, thereby locating this polar amino acid within the core region of the bilayer. In contrast, peptides with Ն3 lysines reside along the surface of the membrane. With 2 lysines in the center of an otherwise hydrophobic amino acid sequence the peptides assume a broad orientational distribution. The energy of lysine discharge, hydrophobic, polar, and all other interactions are estimated to quantitatively describe the polypeptide topologies observed. Furthermore, a molecular modeling algorithm based on the hydrophobicities of atoms in a continuous hydrophilic-hydrophobic-hydrophilic potential describes the experimentally observed peptide topologies well.

On the design of supramolecular assemblies made of peptides and lipid bilayers

Journal of Peptide Science, 2014

Peptides confer interesting properties to materials, supramolecular assemblies and to lipid membranes and are used in analytical devices or within delivery vehicles. Their relative ease of production combined with a high degree of versatility make them attractive candidates to design new such products. Here, we review and demonstrate how CD-and solid-state NMR spectroscopic approaches can be used to follow the reconstitution of peptides into membranes and to describe some of their fundamental characteristics. Whereas CD spectroscopy is used to monitor secondary structure in different solvent systems and thereby aggregation properties of the highly hydrophobic domain of p24, a protein involved in vesicle trafficking, solid-state NMR spectroscopy was used to deduce structural information and the membrane topology of a variety of peptide sequences found in nature or designed. 15 N chemical shift solid-state NMR spectroscopy indicates that the hydrophobic domain of p24 as well as a designed sequence of 19 hydrophobic amino acid residues adopt transmembrane alignments in phosphatidylcholine membranes. In contrast, the amphipathic antimicrobial peptide magainin 2 and the designed sequence LK15 align parallel to the bilayer surface. Additional angular information is obtained from deuterium solid-state NMR spectra of peptide sites labelled with 2 H 3 -alanine, whereas 31 P and 2 H solid-state NMR spectra of the lipids furnish valuable information on the macroscopic order and phase properties of the lipid matrix. Using these approaches, peptides and reconstitution protocols can be elaborated in a rational manner, and the analysis of a great number of peptide sequences is reviewed. Finally, a number of polypeptides with membrane topologies that are sensitive to a variety of environmental conditions such as pH, lipid composition and peptide-to-lipid ratio will be presented. /journal/jpepsci 15 N-Leu23]-p24TMD. (F) Deconvolution of the spectra shown in E provides positiondependent quadrupolar splittings and the corresponding deuterium order parameters S CD. The p24TMD peptide causes a small increase in several of the POPC-d 31 order parameters. The estimated error bar is <0.004 for S CD , which fits within the outline of the symbols used in panel E.

Electrochemical screening of self-assembling β-sheet peptides using supported phospholipid monolayers

Medical Engineering & Physics, 2006

In the context of the medical applications of beta-sheet self-assembling peptides, it is important to be able to predict their activity at the biological membrane level. A study of the interaction of four systematically varied 11-residue (P11-1, P11-2, P11-6 and P11-7) and one 13-residue (P13-1) designed beta-sheet self-assembling peptides with DOPC monolayers on a mercury electrode is reported in this paper. Experiments were carried out in 0.1 mol dm(-3) KCl electrolyte with added phosphate buffer (0.001 mol dm(-3)) at pH approximately 7.6. The capacity-potential curves of the coated electrode in the presence and absence of the different peptides were measured using out-of-phase ac voltammetry. The frequency dependence of the complex impedance of the coated electrode surfaces in the presence and absence of the peptides was estimated between 65,000 and 0.1 Hz at -0.4V versus Ag/AgCl 3.5 mol(-3) dm(-3) KCl. The monolayer permeabilising properties of the peptides were studied by following the reduction of Tl(I) to Tl(Hg) at the coated electrode. Of the five peptides studied, P11-2, P11-7 and P13-1 interact most strongly with the DOPC layer. P11-1 which has a polar primary structure shows no obvious interaction with the phospholipid but surprisingly, it permeabilises the phospholipid layer to Tl(+).

The structure and orientation of class-A amphipathic peptides on a phospholipid bilayer surface

European Biophysics Journal, 1999

The amphipathic α-helix is a recognised structural motif that is shared by membrane-associating proteins and peptides of diverse function. The aim of this paper is to determine the orientation of an α-helical amphipathic peptide on the bilayer surface. We use five amphipathic 18-residue peptide analogues of a class A amphipathic peptide that is known to associate with a bilayer surface. Tyrosine and tryptophan are used as spectroscopic probes to sense local environments in the peptide in solution and when bound to the surface of unilamellar phosphatidylcholine vesicles. In a series of peptides, tryptophan is moved progressively along the sequence from the nonpolar face (positions 3, 7, 4) to the polar face of the peptide (positions 2, 12). The local environment of the tryptophan residue at each position is determined using fluorescence spectroscopy employing quantum yield, and the wavelength of the emission maximum as indicators of micropolarity. The exposure of the tryptophan residues at each site is assessed by acrylamide quenching. On association with vesicles, the tryptophan residues at positions 3, 7 and 14 are in nonpolar water-shielded environments, and the tryptophan at position 12 is in an exposed polar environment. The tryptophan at position 2, which is located near the bilayer-water interface, exhibits intermediate behaviour. Analysis of the second-derivative absorption spectrum confirmed that the tyrosine residue at position 7 is in a nonpolar watershielded environment in the peptide-lipid complex. We conclude that these class A amphipathic peptides lie parallel to the lipid surface and penetrate no deeper than the ester linkages of the phospholipids.