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1.
A class of peptides that associate with lipids, known as oblique-orientated peptides, was recently described [Brasseur R., Pillot, T., Lins, L., Vandekerckhove, J. & Rosseneu, M. (1997) Trends Biochem. Sci. 22, 167-171]. Due to an asymmetric distribution of hydrophobic residues along the axis of the alpha-helix, such peptides adopt an oblique orientation which can destabilise membranes or lipid cores. Variants of these oblique peptides, designed to have an homogeneous distribution of hydrophobic and hydrophilic residues along the helical axis, are classified as regular amphipathic peptides. These peptides are expected to lie parallel to the polar/apolar interface with their hydrophobic residues directed towards the apolar and their hydrophilic residues towards the polar phase. An hydrophobic, oblique-orientated peptide was identified at residues 56-68 in the sequence of the lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT), enzyme. This peptide is predicted to penetrate a lipid bilayer at an angle of 40 degrees through its more hydrophobic C-terminal end and thereby induce the destabilisation of a membrane or a lipid core. The LCAT-(56-68) wild-type peptide was synthesised together with the LCAT-(56-68, 0 degrees) variant, in which the hydrophobicity gradient was abolished through residue permutations. In two other variants, designed to keep their oblique orientation, the W61 residue was shifted either towards the more hydrophilic N-terminal at residue 57, or to position 68 at the hydrophobic C-terminal end of the peptide. Peptide-induced vesicle fusion was demonstrated by fluorescence measurements using pyrene-labeled vesicles and by monitoring of vesicle size by gel filtration. The interaction between peptides and lipids was monitored by measurement of the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence emission of the peptides. Fluorescence polarisation measurements, using diphenyl hexatriene, were carried out to follow changes in the lipid fluidity. The LCAT-(56-68) wild-type peptide and the two oblique variants, induced fusion of unilamellar dimyristoylglycerophosphocholine vesicles. Tryptophan fluorescence emission measurements showed a 12-14 nm blue shift upon addition of the wild-type peptide and of the W61-->68 variant to lipids, whereas the fluorescence of the W61-->57 variant did not change significantly. This observation supports the insertion of the more hydrophobic C-terminal residues into the lipid phase, as predicted by the theoretical calculations. In contrast, the 0 degrees variant peptide had no fusogenic activity, and it associated with lipids to form small discoidal lipid/peptide complexes. The phospholipid transition temperature was decreased after addition of the wild-type, the W61-->68 and W61-->57 fusogenic peptides, whereas the opposite effect was observed with the 0 degrees variant. The behaviour of the wild-type and variant LCAT-(56-68) peptides stresses the contribution of the hydrophobicity gradient along the axis of an amphipathic peptide to the mode of association of this peptide with lipids. This parameter consequently influences the structural modifications occurring to lipids upon association with amphipathic peptides.  相似文献   

2.
Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules bind to numerous peptides and display these on the cell surface for T cell recognition. In a given immune response, receptors on T cells recognize antigenic peptides that are a minor population of MHC class II-bound peptides. To control which peptides are presented to T cells, it may be desirable to use recombinant MHC molecules with covalently bound antigenic peptides. To study T cell responses to such homogeneous peptide-MHC complexes, we engineered an HLA-DR1 cDNA coding for influenza hemagglutinin, influenza matrix, or HIV p24 gag peptides covalently attached via a peptide spacer to the N terminus of the DR1 beta chain. Co-transfection with DR alpha cDNA into mouse L cells resulted in surface expression of HLA-DR1 molecules that reacted with monoclonal antibodies (mAb) specific for correctly folded HLA-DR epitopes. This suggested that the spacer and peptide did not alter expression or folding of the molecule. We then engineered an additional peptide spacer between the C terminus of a truncated beta chain (without transmembrane or cytoplasmic domains) and the N terminus of full-length DR alpha chain. Transfection of this cDNA into mouse L cells resulted in surface expression of the entire covalently linked heterotrimer of peptide, beta chain, and alpha chain with the expected molecular mass of approximately 66 kDa. These single-chain HLA-DR1 molecules reacted with mAb specific for correctly folded HLA-DR epitopes, and identified one mAb with [MHC + peptide] specificity. Affinity-purified soluble secreted single-chain molecules with truncated alpha chain moved in electrophoresis as compact class II MHC dimers. Cell surface two-chain or single-chain HLA-DR1 molecules with a covalent HA peptide stimulated HLA-DR1-restricted HA-specific T cells. They were immunogenic in vitro for peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The two-chain and single-chain HLA-DR1 molecules with covalent HA peptide had reduced binding for the bacterial superantigens staphylococcal enterotoxin A and B and almost no binding for toxic shock syndrome toxin-1. The unique properties of these engineered HLA-DR1 molecules may facilitate our understanding of the complex nature of antigen recognition and aid in the development of novel vaccines with reduced superantigen binding.  相似文献   

3.
To investigate the functional roles of individual HLA-DR residues in T cell recognition, transfectants expressing wild-type or mutant DR(alpha,beta 1*0401) molecules with single amino acid substitutions at 14 polymorphic positions of the DR beta 1*0401 chain or 19 positions of the DR alpha chain were used as antigen-presenting cells for five T cell clones specific for the influenza hemagglutinin peptide, HA307-19. Of the six polymorphic positions in the DR beta floor that were examined, mutations at only two positions eliminated T cell recognition: positions 13 (four clones) and 28 (one clone). In contrast, individual mutations at DR beta positions 70, 71, 78, and 86 on the alpha helix eliminated recognition by each of the clones, and mutations at positions 74 and 67 eliminated recognition by four and two clones, respectively. Most of the DR alpha mutations had minimal or no effect on most of the clones, although one clone was very sensitive to changes in the DR alpha chain, with loss of recognition in response to 10 mutants. Mutants that abrogated recognition by all of the clones were assessed for peptide binding, and only the beta 86 mutation drastically decreased peptide binding. Single amino acid substitutions at polymorphic positions in the central part of the DR beta alpha helix disrupted T cell recognition much more frequently than substitutions in the floor, suggesting that DR beta residues on the alpha helix make relatively greater contributions than those in the floor to the ability of the DR(alpha,beta 1*0401) molecule to present HA307-19. The data indicate that DR beta residues 13, 70, 71, 74, and 78, which are located in pocket 4 of the peptide binding site in the crystal structure of the DR1 molecule, exert a major and disproportionate influence on the outcome of T cell recognition, compared with other polymorphic residues.  相似文献   

4.
Several compounds that specifically inhibited replication of the H1 and H2 subtypes of influenza virus type A were identified by screening a chemical library for antiviral activity. In single-cycle infections, the compounds inhibited virus-specific protein synthesis when added before or immediately after infection but were ineffective when added 30 min later, suggesting that an uncoating step was blocked. Sequencing of hemagglutinin (HA) genes of several independent mutant viruses resistant to the compounds revealed single amino acid changes that clustered in the stem region of the HA trimer in and near the HA2 fusion peptide. One of the compounds, an N-substituted piperidine, could be docked in a pocket in this region by computer-assisted molecular modeling. This compound blocked the fusogenic activity of HA, as evidenced by its inhibition of low-pH-induced cell-cell fusion in infected cell monolayers. An analog which was more effective than the parent compound in inhibiting virus replication was synthesized. It was also more effective in blocking other manifestations of the low-pH-induced conformational change in HA, including virus inactivation, virus-induced hemolysis of erythrocytes, and susceptibility of the HA to proteolytic degradation. Both compounds inhibited viral protein synthesis and replication more effectively in cells infected with a virus mutated in its M2 protein than with wild-type virus. The possible functional relationship between M2 and HA suggested by these results is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The mechanism of influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA)-mediated membrane fusion has been inferred in part from studies examining pH-induced structural changes in soluble HA derivatives lacking the viral membrane anchor and, sometimes, the fusion peptide (the C- and N-terminal residues of the HA2 chain, respectively). To reconcile structure-based mechanisms of HA-mediated membrane fusion with structural implications of functional studies performed on membrane-embedded HA, we have undertaken attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopic analyses of membrane-embedded HA (strain X:31) and its fragments reconstituted into supported lipid bilayers. The fragments correspond to proteolytic products with the majority of the HA1 chain and, in some cases, the fusion peptide removed (THA2 and THA2F-, respectively). In combination with R18 fluorescence dequenching to monitor the functional implications of HA1 subunit removal, we have assessed the influence of pH and target membrane presentation on the secondary structures, orientations relative to the membrane, and dynamics of these molecules. We find that X:31 HA is more tilted towards the plane of the membrane under fusion than under resting conditions, that the fitting of HA depends on the presence of the HA1 chain, that the residues connecting the membrane-inserted fusion peptide with the crystallographically determined coiled coil probably adopt an alpha-helical conformation, and that several changes in the secondary structure and the amide H/D exchange kinetics occur as a result of acidification and target membrane presentation, which can be interpreted as small changes and a release of strain in the static and dynamic structure of membrane-bound HA. THA2 mediatcs fusion, but less efficiently and with less pH-selectivity than HA.  相似文献   

6.
Circular dichroism (CD) and attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy are used to establish the secondary structure of peptides containing one or more transmembrane segments (M1-M4) of the Torpedo californica nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR). Peptides containing the M2-M3 and M1-M2-M3 transmembrane segments of the AChR beta-subunit and the M4 segment of the alpha- and gamma-subunits were isolated from proteolytic digests of receptor subunits, purified, and reconstituted into lipid vesicles. For each peptide, an amide I vibrational frequency centered between 1650 and 1656 cm-1 and negative CD absorption bands at 208 and 222 nm indicate that the peptide is largely alpha-helical. In addition, the CD spectrum of a tryptic peptide of the alpha-subunit containing the M1 segment is also consistent with a largely alpha-helical structure. However, secondary structure analysis of the alpha-M1 CD spectrum indicates the presence of other structures, suggesting that the M1 segment may represent either a distorted alpha-helix, likely the consequence of several proline residues, or may not be entirely alpha-helical. Overall, these findings are consistent with studies that indicate that the transmembrane region of the AChR comprises predominantly, if not exclusively, membrane-spanning alpha-helices.  相似文献   

7.
Peptides derived from conserved heptad-repeat regions of several viruses have been shown recently to inhibit virus-cell fusion. To find out their possible role in the fusion process, two biologically active heptad-repeat segments of the fusion protein (F) of Sendai virus, SV-150 (residues 150-186), and SV-473 (residues 473-495) were synthesized, fluorescently labeled and spectroscopically characterized for their structure and organization in solution and within the membrane. SV-150 was found to be 50-fold less active than SV-473 in inhibiting Sendai virus-cell fusion. Circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy revealed that in aqueous solution, the peptides are self-associated and adopt low alpha-helical structure. However, when the two peptides are mixed together, their alpha-helical content significantly increases. Fluorescence studies, CD, and polarized attenuated total reflection infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy showed that both peptides, alone or as a complex, bind strongly to negatively charged and zwitterionic phospholipid membranes, dissociate therein into alpha-helical monomers, but do not perturb the lipid packing of the membrane. The ability of the peptides to interact with each other in solution may be correlated with antiviral activity, whereas their ability to interact with the membrane, together with their location near the fusion peptide and the transmembrane domain, suggests a revision to the currently accepted model for viral-induced membrane fusion. In the revised model, in the sequence of events associated with viral entry, the two heptad-repeat sequences may assist in bringing the viral and cellular membranes closer, thus facilitating membrane fusion.  相似文献   

8.
As a step toward studying membrane fusion with a simplified molecule, the ectodomain, residues 1-185, of the membrane-anchored subunit HA2 of the influenza virus haemagglutinin (HA) was solubilized by adding the very polar FLAG octapeptide (Asp-Tyr-Lys-Asp-Asp-Asp-Asp-Lys) to the N-terminal HA2 fusion peptide. The resulting chimeric protein, F185, when expressed in bacteria, folded spontaneously into a soluble trimer, with a high alpha-helical content and a high melting temperature, structural characteristics of the low-pH-induced conformation of HA2. Removal of the FLAG octapeptide by proteolysis with enterokinase converted the soluble molecule to one that aggregated, bound nonionic detergent, and bound to lipid vesicles, properties of the low-pH-induced conformation of HA. Thermolysin treatment of the aggregated protein removed the nonpolar fusion peptide, regenerating soluble trimers of HA2 (residues 24-185), which is analogous to thermolysin treatment of HA in the low-pH-induced conformation. Thermolysin treatment also dissociates F185 from the detergent-protein complex by removing the fusion peptide. These results suggest that highly polar peptides can be fused to the membrane-binding regions of membrane proteins to increase their solubility. They also indicate that ectodomains of HA2 made in bacteria have membrane-binding properties similar to those of the same ectodomain generated by low-pH treatment of HA isolated from virus.  相似文献   

9.
The ectodomain of the Ebola virus Gp2 glycoprotein was solubilized with a trimeric, isoleucine zipper derived from GCN4 (pIIGCN4) in place of the hydrophobic fusion peptide at the N terminus. This chimeric molecule forms a trimeric, highly alpha-helical, and very thermostable molecule, as determined by chemical crosslinking and circular dichroism. Electron microscopy indicates that Gp2 folds into a rod-like structure like influenza HA2 and HIV-1 gp41, providing further evidence that viral fusion proteins from diverse families such as Orthomyxoviridae (Influenza), Retroviridae (HIV-1), and Filoviridae (Ebola) share common structural features, and suggesting a common membrane fusion mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
We recently demonstrated that an amphipathic net-negatively charged peptide consisting of 11 amino acids (WAE 11) strongly promotes fusion of large unilamellar liposomes (LUV) when anchored to a liposomal membrane [Pecheur, E. I., Hoekstra, D., Sainte-Marie, J., Maurin, L., Bienvenue, A., and Philippot, J. R. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 3773-3781]. To elucidate a potential relationship between peptide structure and its fusogenic properties and to test the hypothesis that specific structural motifs are a prerequisite for WAE-induced fusion, three 11-mer WAE-peptide analogues (WAK, WAEPro, and WAS) were synthesized and investigated for their structure and fusion activity. Structural analysis of the synthetic peptides by infrared attenuated total reflection spectroscopy reveals a distinct propensity of each peptide toward a helical structure after their anchorage to a liposomal surface, emphasizing the importance of anchorage on conveying a secondary structure, thereby conferring fusogenicity to these peptides. However, whereas WAE and WAK peptides displayed an essentially nonleaky fusion process, WAS- and WAEPro-induced fusion was accompanied by substantial leakage. It appears that peptide helicity as such is not a sufficient condition to convey optimal fusion properties to these 11-mer peptides. Studies of changes in the intrinsic Trp fluorescence and iodide quenching experiments were carried out and revealed the absence of migration of the Trp residue of WAS and WAEPro to a hydrophobic environment, upon their interaction with the target membranes. These results do not support the penetration of both peptides as their mode of membrane interaction and destabilization but rather suggest their folding along the vesicle surface, posing them as surface-seeking helixes. This is in striking contrast to the behavior observed for WAE and WAK, for which at least partial penetration of the Trp residue was demonstrated. These results indicate that subtle differences in the primary sequence of a fusogenic peptide could induce dramatic changes in the way the peptide interacts with a bilayer, culminating in equally drastic changes in their functional properties. The data also reveal a certain degree of sequence specificity in WAE-induced fusion.  相似文献   

11.
Novel synthetic peptides, based on carrier peptide analogs (YKAKnWK) and an amphipathic peptide (GLFEALLELLESLWELLLEA), have been formulated with DNA plasmids to create peptide-based gene delivery systems. The carrier peptides are used to condense plasmids into nanoparticles with a hydrodynamic diameter (DH) ranging from 40 to 200 nm, which are sterically stable for over 100 h. Size and morphology of the carrier peptide/plasmid complex have been determined by photon correlation spectroscopy (PCS) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), respectively. The amphipathic peptide is used as a pH-sensitive lytic agent to facilitate release of the plasmid from endosomes after endocytosis of the peptide/plasmid complex. Hemolysis assays have shown that the amphipathic peptide destabilizes lipid bilayers at low pH, mimicking the properties of viral fusogenic peptides. However, circular dichroism studies show that unlike the viral fusion peptides, this amphipathic peptide loses some of its alpha-helical structure at low pH in the presence of liposomes. The peptide-based gene delivery systems were tested for transfection efficiency in a variety of cell lines, including 14-day C2C12 mouse myotubes, using gene expression systems containing the beta-galactosidase reporter gene. Transfection data demonstrate a correlation between in vitro transfection efficiency and the combination of several physical properties of the peptide/plasmid complexes, including 1) DNA dose, 2) the zeta potential of the particle, 3) the requirement of both lytic and carrier peptides, and 4) the number of lysine residues associated with the carrier peptide. Transfection data on 14-day C2C12 myotubes utilizing the therapeutic human growth hormone gene formulated in an optimal peptide gene delivery system show an increase in gene expression over time, with a maximum in protein levels at 96 h (approximately 18 ng/ml).  相似文献   

12.
Entry of influenza virus into the host cell is dependent on the fusion of the viral envelope with the endosomal membrane and is mediated by a low-pH-induced change of the viral hemagglutinin (HA) to a conformation that is fusogenic. A compound related to podocarpic acid (180299) was identified that inhibits multicycle replication of influenza A/Kawasaki/86 (H1N1) virus in culture. Treatment of Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells with 180299 at 1 h before infection resulted in the inhibition of viral protein synthesis. Addition of 20 microgram of 180299/ml at 1 h p.i. had no effect, indicating that 180299 affects an early step of the influenza viral replication cycle. Genetic analysis of reassortants between sensitive and resistant viruses demonstrated that hemagglutinin (HA) conferred the 180299-resistant (180299(r)) phenotype. Twelve independent isolates of influenza A/Kawasaki/86 were selected for resistance to 180299, and sequence analysis revealed that each of these viruses contained amino acid substitutions in the HA. These mutations are dispersed throughout the HA primary amino acid sequence and cluster in one of two regions: the interface between HA1 and HA2 and in a region near the fusion domain of HA2. When compared with the parent virus, the pH-of-inactivation of the resistant mutants was increased by 0.3 to 0.6 pH unit, suggesting that the mutant HAs undergo the conformational change at an elevated pH. Fusion of human erythrocytes to MDCK cells infected with parent influenza A/Kawasaki/86 was inhibited by 180299 (0.1-10 microgram/ml) in a concentration-dependent manner, whereas fusion of erythrocytes to MDCK cells infected with 180299(r) mutants was not affected. These results suggest that 180299 interacts with the neutral pH conformation of influenza A HA and prevents the low-pH-induced change of HA to its fusogenic conformation.  相似文献   

13.
A group of synthetic peptides having an amino acid sequence related to the N-terminal region of the influenza virus hemagglutinin HA-2 chain can induce phospholipid membrane fusion in a pH-dependent manner. These peptides bind to membranes to form alpha-helices even at pH's where no fusion activity is seen. We determined the orientation of these alpha-helical peptides in lipid multibilayers using attenuated total reflection infrared spectroscopy and found that the peptide alpha-helices took a preferential orientation, the helix axis being about 70 degrees from the normal of the membrane plane, or in other words rather parallel to the membrane plane. The orientation was almost independent of pH and a modification of the N-terminal amino group which reduced the fusion activity of the peptides. The determination was carried out for peptides in lipid multibilayers in dry or hydrated (membranes equilibrated with D2O vapor) conditions. Although a slight decrease in the helix orientation angle from the membrane normal was noticed for a hydrated system, the difference between the results for dry and hydrated conditions was small.  相似文献   

14.
The paramyxovirus fusion (F) protein mediates membrane fusion. The biologically active F protein consists of a membrane distal subunit, F2, and a membrane-anchored subunit, F1. We have identified a highly stable structure composed of peptides derived from the F1 heptad repeat A, which abuts the hydrophobic fusion peptide (peptide N-1), and the F1 heptad repeat B, located 270 residues downstream and adjacent to the transmembrane domain (peptides C-1 and C-2). In isolation, peptide N-1 is 47% alpha-helical and peptide C-1 and C-2 are unfolded. When mixed together, peptides N1 + C1 form a thermostable (Tm >90 degreesC), 82% alpha-helical, discrete trimer of heterodimers (mass 31,300 Mr) that is resistant to denaturation by 2% SDS at 40 degreesC. We suggest that this alpha-helical trimeric complex represents the core most stable form of the F protein that either is fusion competent or forms after fusion has occurred. Peptide C-1 is a potent inhibitor of both the lipid mixing and the aqueous content mixing fusion activity of the SV5 F protein. In contrast, peptides N-1 and N-2 inhibit cytoplasmic content mixing but not lipid mixing, leading to a stable hemifusion state. Thus, these peptides define functionally different steps in the fusion process. The parallels among both the fusion processes and the protein structures of paramyxovirus F proteins, HIV gp41, and influenza virus hemagglutinin are discussed, as the analogies are indicative of a conserved paradigm for fusion promotion among fusion proteins from widely disparate viruses.  相似文献   

15.
In order to investigate the relationship between structure and function of a putative fusogenic region of PH-30a, a protein active in sperm-egg fusion, two peptides, SFP22 and SFP23, whose sequences correspond to the residues 90-111 and 89-111 of PH-30 alpha, respectively, were chemically synthesized. An analog of SFP23, SFP23AA, which has an Ala-Ala sequence instead of the Pro-Pro sequence in SFP23, was also prepared. The CD study indicated that SFP22 and SFP23 mainly took a beta-structure in the presence of DPPC and DPPC/DPPG (3/1) vesicles, while SFP23AA showed an alpha-helical pattern though the alpha-helical content calculated was low (25-30%). alpha-Helical CD curve was observed for these peptides in trifluoroethanol. The membrane-perturbing activity of SFP22 and SFP23 was weaker than that of SFP23AA. On the other hand, the membrane-fusogenic activity of SFP22 and SFP23 to acidic phospholipid bilayers was much stronger than that of SFP23AA. All the peptides caused very weak cell lysis. These results are consistent with the reported speculation [Blobel, C. P. et al. (1992), Nature (London) 356, 248-252] that residues 90-111 of PH-30 alpha may be the fusogenic region and suggest that the Pro-Pro sequence is one of the important factors for holding the active secondary structure of the fusogenic region of PH-30 alpha in membranes.  相似文献   

16.
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 DeltaG is estimated at -8 kcal mole-1 and the number of phospholipid molecules involved is about 20-25 per peptide molecule. Peptides are bound as single-stranded alpha 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 alpha 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 alpha helices in relation to the position of phosphorus atoms in the unperturbed lipid leaflet is estimated at 3.2 A.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Synthetic lipid A analogues and partial structures were analyzed and compared with natural hexaacyl lipid A from E. coli applying Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The investigations comprised (i) the measurement of the beta <=> alpha phase transition of the acyl chains via monitoring of the symmetric stretching vibration of the methylene groups, (ii) an estimation of the supramolecular aggregate structures evaluating vibrations from the interface like ester carbonyl and applying theoretical calculations (iii) a determination of the inter- and intramolecular conformations monitoring functional groups from the interface and the diglucosamine backbone (ester carbonyl, phosphate). The phase transition temperature Tc was found to be nearly a linear function of the number of acyl chains for most bisphosphoryl compounds indicating comparable packing density, whereas the deviating behaviour of some samples indicated a higher packing density. From the determination of the supramolecular aggregate structures (cubic, HII) of natural hexaacyl lipid A by X-ray small-angle diffraction, the existence of the same aggregate structures also for the synthetic hexaacyl lipid A was deduced from the nearly identical thermotropism of the ester carbonyl band. From this, a good approximation of the supramolecular structures of all synthetic samples was possible on the basis of the theory of Israelachvili. The analysis of the main phosphate band, together with that of the Tc data and former colorimetric results, allowed the establishment of a model of the intermolecular conformations of neighbouring lipid A/LPS molecules. The biological relevance of the findings is discussed in terms of the strongly varying biological activity (between high and no activity) of the samples.  相似文献   

19.
To better understand the roles of different regions of influenza hemagglutinin in membrane fusion, we have studied the fusion properties of large unilamellar vesicles in the presence of constructs comprising the 127 amino acid ectodomain of the HA2 fragment (FHA2) as well as mutated forms of FHA2 containing single amino acid substitutions, the 95 amino acid truncated form of FHA2 lacking the N-terminal fusion peptide (SHA2), the 20 amino acid N-terminal fusion peptide and the ten amino acid peptide corresponding to the kinked loop region of FHA2. The 100 nm liposomes were made from dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine, dioleoylphosphatidylcholine and cholesterol in equimolar ratio. At pH 5 a high rate of lipid mixing was observed with FHA2 present, even at very low molar concentrations, whereas much lower rates were observed using the shorter constructs: SHA2, the fusion peptide, and the loop peptide. Concentrations of FHA2 which promoted extensive lipid mixing also induced leakage of aqueous contents. Marked effects of FHA2 were also observed with liposomes of egg phosphatidylcholine. All of the changes observed with the liposomes were highly pH-dependent, with only negligible changes occurring at pH 7. The results demonstrate the potent action of FHA2 in promoting lipid mixing and demonstrate the contribution of other regions of the ectodomain of FHA2, in addition to the fusion peptide, to the mechanism of acceleration of membrane fusion. The results also indicate that the pH dependence of fusion is not due solely to changes in the interactions between the HA1 and HA2 subunits. Thus, the "spring loaded energy" is not required to bring about the apposition of the two membranes, considering that FHA2 is already in its thermostable conformation. The acidic amino acid residues in the kinked loop region appear to play a particularly important role in the pH-dependent fusion process as demonstrated by the marked loss of lipid mixing activity of mutant forms of FHA2.  相似文献   

20.
The structural effects of the fusion peptide of feline leukemia virus (FeLV) on lipid polymorphism were studied, using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and time-resolved X-ray diffraction. This peptide lowers the bilayer to inverted hexagonal phase transition temperature, TH, of dipalmitoleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DiPoPE) at peptide mole fractions of up to 1.5 x 10(-3) at pH 5.0 and at pH 7.4. The temperature at which isotropic 31P NMR signals for monomethyldioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (MeDOPE) first occurred is lowered by the FeLV peptide. The amount of isotropic signal seen at 40 degrees C is directly correlated to the peptide:lipid molar ratio. In the peptide-containing samples, more lipid remains in the isotropic state over the whole recorded temperature range. Isotropic 31P NMR signals were observed for DiPoPE in the presence of the FeLV peptide for the entire recorded temperature range of 35-50 degrees C, while pure DiPoPE showed no significant amount of isotropic signal. X-ray studies of DiPoPE show the formation of a new lipid phase with peptide, which is not seen in the pure lipid samples. Disordering of the Lalpha phase is evidenced by broadening of the diffraction peaks, and the hexagonal cell parameter is decreased with peptide present. Our results suggest that the FeLV peptide is increasing the negative curvature of the lipid system, which is thought to be crucial to the formation of highly bent, high-energy structural fusion intermediates, such as the "stalk" model. Fusion activity for this putative fusogenic peptide was also demonstrated, using a resonance energy transfer (RET) lipid mixing assay. To our knowledge, this work provides the first published experimental evidence of both fusogenic activity and effects on lipid polymorphism for the FeLV fusion peptide.  相似文献   

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