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High-Resolution Structures and Orientations of Antimicrobial Peptides Piscidin 1 and Piscidin 3 in Fluid Bilayers Reveal Tilting, Kinking, and Bilayer Immersion

[Image: see text] While antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have been widely investigated as potential therapeutics, high-resolution structures obtained under biologically relevant conditions are lacking. Here, the high-resolution structures of the homologous 22-residue long AMPs piscidin 1 (p1) and pisci...

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Autores principales: Perrin, B. Scott, Tian, Ye, Fu, Riqiang, Grant, Christopher V., Chekmenev, Eduard Y., Wieczorek, William E., Dao, Alexander E., Hayden, Robert M., Burzynski, Caitlin M., Venable, Richard M., Sharma, Mukesh, Opella, Stanley J., Pastor, Richard W., Cotten, Myriam L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2014
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3985945/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24410116
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja411119m
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author Perrin, B. Scott
Tian, Ye
Fu, Riqiang
Grant, Christopher V.
Chekmenev, Eduard Y.
Wieczorek, William E.
Dao, Alexander E.
Hayden, Robert M.
Burzynski, Caitlin M.
Venable, Richard M.
Sharma, Mukesh
Opella, Stanley J.
Pastor, Richard W.
Cotten, Myriam L.
author_facet Perrin, B. Scott
Tian, Ye
Fu, Riqiang
Grant, Christopher V.
Chekmenev, Eduard Y.
Wieczorek, William E.
Dao, Alexander E.
Hayden, Robert M.
Burzynski, Caitlin M.
Venable, Richard M.
Sharma, Mukesh
Opella, Stanley J.
Pastor, Richard W.
Cotten, Myriam L.
author_sort Perrin, B. Scott
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] While antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have been widely investigated as potential therapeutics, high-resolution structures obtained under biologically relevant conditions are lacking. Here, the high-resolution structures of the homologous 22-residue long AMPs piscidin 1 (p1) and piscidin 3 (p3) are determined in fluid-phase 3:1 phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylglycerol (PC/PG) and 1:1 phosphatidylethanolamine/phosphatidylglycerol (PE/PG) bilayers to identify molecular features important for membrane destabilization in bacterial cell membrane mimics. Structural refinement of (1)H–(15)N dipolar couplings and (15)N chemical shifts measured by oriented sample solid-state NMR and all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations provide structural and orientational information of high precision and accuracy about these interfacially bound α-helical peptides. The tilt of the helical axis, τ, is between 83° and 93° with respect to the bilayer normal for all systems and analysis methods. The average azimuthal rotation, ρ, is 235°, which results in burial of hydrophobic residues in the bilayer. The refined NMR and MD structures reveal a slight kink at G13 that delineates two helical segments characterized by a small difference in their τ angles (<10°) and significant difference in their ρ angles (∼25°). Remarkably, the kink, at the end of a G(X)(4)G motif highly conserved among members of the piscidin family, allows p1 and p3 to adopt ρ angles that maximize their hydrophobic moments. Two structural features differentiate the more potent p1 from p3: p1 has a larger ρ angle and less N-terminal fraying. The peptides have comparable depths of insertion in PC/PG, but p3 is 1.2 Å more deeply inserted than p1 in PE/PG. In contrast to the ideal α-helical structures typically assumed in mechanistic models of AMPs, p1 and p3 adopt disrupted α-helical backbones that correct for differences in the amphipathicity of their N- and C-ends, and their centers of mass lie ∼1.2–3.6 Å below the plane defined by the C2 atoms of the lipid acyl chains.
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spelling pubmed-39859452015-01-10 High-Resolution Structures and Orientations of Antimicrobial Peptides Piscidin 1 and Piscidin 3 in Fluid Bilayers Reveal Tilting, Kinking, and Bilayer Immersion Perrin, B. Scott Tian, Ye Fu, Riqiang Grant, Christopher V. Chekmenev, Eduard Y. Wieczorek, William E. Dao, Alexander E. Hayden, Robert M. Burzynski, Caitlin M. Venable, Richard M. Sharma, Mukesh Opella, Stanley J. Pastor, Richard W. Cotten, Myriam L. J Am Chem Soc [Image: see text] While antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have been widely investigated as potential therapeutics, high-resolution structures obtained under biologically relevant conditions are lacking. Here, the high-resolution structures of the homologous 22-residue long AMPs piscidin 1 (p1) and piscidin 3 (p3) are determined in fluid-phase 3:1 phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylglycerol (PC/PG) and 1:1 phosphatidylethanolamine/phosphatidylglycerol (PE/PG) bilayers to identify molecular features important for membrane destabilization in bacterial cell membrane mimics. Structural refinement of (1)H–(15)N dipolar couplings and (15)N chemical shifts measured by oriented sample solid-state NMR and all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations provide structural and orientational information of high precision and accuracy about these interfacially bound α-helical peptides. The tilt of the helical axis, τ, is between 83° and 93° with respect to the bilayer normal for all systems and analysis methods. The average azimuthal rotation, ρ, is 235°, which results in burial of hydrophobic residues in the bilayer. The refined NMR and MD structures reveal a slight kink at G13 that delineates two helical segments characterized by a small difference in their τ angles (<10°) and significant difference in their ρ angles (∼25°). Remarkably, the kink, at the end of a G(X)(4)G motif highly conserved among members of the piscidin family, allows p1 and p3 to adopt ρ angles that maximize their hydrophobic moments. Two structural features differentiate the more potent p1 from p3: p1 has a larger ρ angle and less N-terminal fraying. The peptides have comparable depths of insertion in PC/PG, but p3 is 1.2 Å more deeply inserted than p1 in PE/PG. In contrast to the ideal α-helical structures typically assumed in mechanistic models of AMPs, p1 and p3 adopt disrupted α-helical backbones that correct for differences in the amphipathicity of their N- and C-ends, and their centers of mass lie ∼1.2–3.6 Å below the plane defined by the C2 atoms of the lipid acyl chains. American Chemical Society 2014-01-10 2014-03-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3985945/ /pubmed/24410116 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja411119m Text en Copyright © 2014 American Chemical Society
spellingShingle Perrin, B. Scott
Tian, Ye
Fu, Riqiang
Grant, Christopher V.
Chekmenev, Eduard Y.
Wieczorek, William E.
Dao, Alexander E.
Hayden, Robert M.
Burzynski, Caitlin M.
Venable, Richard M.
Sharma, Mukesh
Opella, Stanley J.
Pastor, Richard W.
Cotten, Myriam L.
High-Resolution Structures and Orientations of Antimicrobial Peptides Piscidin 1 and Piscidin 3 in Fluid Bilayers Reveal Tilting, Kinking, and Bilayer Immersion
title High-Resolution Structures and Orientations of Antimicrobial Peptides Piscidin 1 and Piscidin 3 in Fluid Bilayers Reveal Tilting, Kinking, and Bilayer Immersion
title_full High-Resolution Structures and Orientations of Antimicrobial Peptides Piscidin 1 and Piscidin 3 in Fluid Bilayers Reveal Tilting, Kinking, and Bilayer Immersion
title_fullStr High-Resolution Structures and Orientations of Antimicrobial Peptides Piscidin 1 and Piscidin 3 in Fluid Bilayers Reveal Tilting, Kinking, and Bilayer Immersion
title_full_unstemmed High-Resolution Structures and Orientations of Antimicrobial Peptides Piscidin 1 and Piscidin 3 in Fluid Bilayers Reveal Tilting, Kinking, and Bilayer Immersion
title_short High-Resolution Structures and Orientations of Antimicrobial Peptides Piscidin 1 and Piscidin 3 in Fluid Bilayers Reveal Tilting, Kinking, and Bilayer Immersion
title_sort high-resolution structures and orientations of antimicrobial peptides piscidin 1 and piscidin 3 in fluid bilayers reveal tilting, kinking, and bilayer immersion
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3985945/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24410116
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja411119m
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