The amphipathic helix concept: length effects on ideally amphipathic LiKj(i=2j) peptides to acquire optimal hemolytic activity

In a minimalist approach to modeling lytic toxins, amphipathic peptides of LiKj with i=2j composition and whose length varies from 5 to 22 residues were studied for their ability to induce hemolysis and lipid vesicle leakage. Their sequences were designed to generate ideally amphipathic alpha helice...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inBiochimica et biophysica acta Vol. 1416; no. 1-2; pp. 161 - 175
Main Authors Castano, S, Cornut, I, Büttner, K, Dasseux, J L, Dufourcq, J
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands 12.01.1999
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:In a minimalist approach to modeling lytic toxins, amphipathic peptides of LiKj with i=2j composition and whose length varies from 5 to 22 residues were studied for their ability to induce hemolysis and lipid vesicle leakage. Their sequences were designed to generate ideally amphipathic alpha helices with a single K residue per putative turn. All the peptides were lytic, their activities varying by more than a factor of 103 from the shortest 5-residue-long peptide (5-mer) to the longest 22-mer. However, there was no monotonous increase versus length. The 15-mer was as active as the 22-mer and even more than melittin which is used as standard. Partition coefficients from the buffer to the membrane increased in relation to length up to 12 residues, then weakly decreased to reach a plateau, while they were expected to increase monotonously with peptide length and hydrophobicity as revealed from HPLC retention times. Fluorescence labeling by a dansyl group at the N-terminus, or by a W near the CO-terminus, show that up to 12 residues, the peptides were essentially monomeric while longer peptides strongly aggregated in the solution. Lipid affinity was then controlled by peptide length and was found to be limited by folding and self-association in buffer. The lytic activity resulted both from lipid affinity, which varied by a factor of 20-fold, and from efficiency in disturbing the membrane when bound, the latter steeply and monotonously increasing with length. The 15-residue-long peptide, KLLKLLLKLLLKLLK, had the optimal size for highest lytic activity. The shallow location of the fluorescent labels in the lipids is further evidence for a model of peptides remaining flat at the interface.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0006-3002
0005-2736
DOI:10.1016/s0005-2736(98)00219-3