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The Homeodomain Derived Peptide Penetratin Induces Curvature of Fluid Membrane Domains

BACKGROUND: Protein membrane transduction domains that are able to cross the plasma membrane are present in several transcription factors, such as the homeodomain proteins and the viral proteins such as Tat of HIV-1. Their discovery resulted in both new concepts on the cell communication during deve...

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Autores principales: Lamazière, Antonin, Wolf, Claude, Lambert, Olivier, Chassaing, Gérard, Trugnan, Germain, Ayala-Sanmartin, Jesus
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2276244/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18398464
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001938
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author Lamazière, Antonin
Wolf, Claude
Lambert, Olivier
Chassaing, Gérard
Trugnan, Germain
Ayala-Sanmartin, Jesus
author_facet Lamazière, Antonin
Wolf, Claude
Lambert, Olivier
Chassaing, Gérard
Trugnan, Germain
Ayala-Sanmartin, Jesus
author_sort Lamazière, Antonin
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Protein membrane transduction domains that are able to cross the plasma membrane are present in several transcription factors, such as the homeodomain proteins and the viral proteins such as Tat of HIV-1. Their discovery resulted in both new concepts on the cell communication during development, and the conception of cell penetrating peptide vectors for internalisation of active molecules into cells. A promising cell penetrating peptide is Penetratin, which crosses the cell membranes by a receptor and metabolic energy-independent mechanism. Recent works have claimed that Penetratin and similar peptides are internalized by endocytosis, but other endocytosis-independent mechanisms have been proposed. Endosomes or plasma membranes crossing mechanisms are not well understood. Previously, we have shown that basic peptides induce membrane invaginations suggesting a new mechanism for uptake, “physical endocytosis”. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Herein, we investigate the role of membrane lipid phases on Penetratin induced membrane deformations (liquid ordered such as in “raft” microdomains versus disordered fluid “non-raft” domains) in membrane models. Experimental data show that zwitterionic lipid headgroups take part in the interaction with Penetratin suggesting that the external leaflet lipids of cells plasma membrane are competent for peptide interaction in the absence of net negative charges. NMR and X-ray diffraction data show that the membrane perturbations (tubulation and vesiculation) are associated with an increase in membrane negative curvature. These effects on curvature were observed in the liquid disordered but not in the liquid ordered (raft-like) membrane domains. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The better understanding of the internalisation mechanisms of protein transduction domains will help both the understanding of the mechanisms of cell communication and the development of potential therapeutic molecular vectors. Here we showed that the membrane targets for these molecules are preferentially the fluid membrane domains and that the mechanism involves the induction of membrane negative curvature. Consequences on cellular uptake are discussed.
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spelling pubmed-22762442008-04-09 The Homeodomain Derived Peptide Penetratin Induces Curvature of Fluid Membrane Domains Lamazière, Antonin Wolf, Claude Lambert, Olivier Chassaing, Gérard Trugnan, Germain Ayala-Sanmartin, Jesus PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Protein membrane transduction domains that are able to cross the plasma membrane are present in several transcription factors, such as the homeodomain proteins and the viral proteins such as Tat of HIV-1. Their discovery resulted in both new concepts on the cell communication during development, and the conception of cell penetrating peptide vectors for internalisation of active molecules into cells. A promising cell penetrating peptide is Penetratin, which crosses the cell membranes by a receptor and metabolic energy-independent mechanism. Recent works have claimed that Penetratin and similar peptides are internalized by endocytosis, but other endocytosis-independent mechanisms have been proposed. Endosomes or plasma membranes crossing mechanisms are not well understood. Previously, we have shown that basic peptides induce membrane invaginations suggesting a new mechanism for uptake, “physical endocytosis”. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Herein, we investigate the role of membrane lipid phases on Penetratin induced membrane deformations (liquid ordered such as in “raft” microdomains versus disordered fluid “non-raft” domains) in membrane models. Experimental data show that zwitterionic lipid headgroups take part in the interaction with Penetratin suggesting that the external leaflet lipids of cells plasma membrane are competent for peptide interaction in the absence of net negative charges. NMR and X-ray diffraction data show that the membrane perturbations (tubulation and vesiculation) are associated with an increase in membrane negative curvature. These effects on curvature were observed in the liquid disordered but not in the liquid ordered (raft-like) membrane domains. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The better understanding of the internalisation mechanisms of protein transduction domains will help both the understanding of the mechanisms of cell communication and the development of potential therapeutic molecular vectors. Here we showed that the membrane targets for these molecules are preferentially the fluid membrane domains and that the mechanism involves the induction of membrane negative curvature. Consequences on cellular uptake are discussed. Public Library of Science 2008-04-09 /pmc/articles/PMC2276244/ /pubmed/18398464 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001938 Text en Lamaziere et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lamazière, Antonin
Wolf, Claude
Lambert, Olivier
Chassaing, Gérard
Trugnan, Germain
Ayala-Sanmartin, Jesus
The Homeodomain Derived Peptide Penetratin Induces Curvature of Fluid Membrane Domains
title The Homeodomain Derived Peptide Penetratin Induces Curvature of Fluid Membrane Domains
title_full The Homeodomain Derived Peptide Penetratin Induces Curvature of Fluid Membrane Domains
title_fullStr The Homeodomain Derived Peptide Penetratin Induces Curvature of Fluid Membrane Domains
title_full_unstemmed The Homeodomain Derived Peptide Penetratin Induces Curvature of Fluid Membrane Domains
title_short The Homeodomain Derived Peptide Penetratin Induces Curvature of Fluid Membrane Domains
title_sort homeodomain derived peptide penetratin induces curvature of fluid membrane domains
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2276244/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18398464
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001938
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