Antimicrobial peptides of the mastoparans family exert their bactericidal activity by binding to lipid membranes, inducing pores or defects and leaking the internal contents of vesicles and cells. However, this does not seem to be the only mechanism at play, and they might be important in the search for improved peptides with lower undesirable side effects. This work deals with three mastoparans peptides, Polybia-MP-1(MP-1), N2-Polybia-MP-1 (N-MP-1), and Mastoparan X (MPX), which exhibit high sequence homology. They all have three lysine residues and amidated C termini, but because of the presence of two, one, and no aspartic acid residues, respectively, they have +2, +3, and +4 net charges at physiological pH. Here we focus on the effects of these mastoparans peptides on anionic model membranes made of palmitoleyoilphosphatidylcholine (POPC) and palmitoleyoilphosphatidylglycerol (POPG) at 1:1 and 3:1 molar ratios in the presence and in the absence of saline buffer. Zeta potential experiments were carried out to measure the extent of the peptides' binding and accumulation at the vesicle surface, and CD spectra were acquired to quantify the helical structuring of the peptides upon binding. Giant unilamellar vesicles were observed under phase contrast and fluorescence microscopy. We found that the three peptides induced the leakage of GUVs at a gradual rate with many characteristics of the graded mode. This process was faster in the absence of saline buffer. Additionally, we observed that the peptides induced the formation of dense regions of phospholipids and peptides on the GUV surface. This phenomenon was easily observable for the more charged peptides (MPX> N-MP-1 > MP-1) and in the absence of added salt. Our data suggest that these mastoparans accumulate on the bilayer surface and induce a transient interruption to its barrier properties, leaking the vesicle contents. Next, the bilayer recovers its continuity, but this happens in an inhomogeneous way, forming a kind of ply with peptides sandwiched between two juxtaposed membranes. Eventually, a peptide-lipid aggregate forming a lump is formed at high peptide-to-lipid ratios.
Some mastoparan peptides extracted from social wasps display antimicrobial activity and some are hemolytic and cytotoxic. Although the cell specificity of these peptides is complex and poorly understood, it is believed that their net charges and their hydrophobicity contribute to modulate their biological activities. We report a study, using fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopies, evaluating the influence of these two parameters on the lytic activities of five mastoparans in zwitterionic and anionic phospholipid vesicles. Four of these peptides, extracted from the venom of the social wasp Polybia paulista, present both acidic and basic residues with net charges ranging from +1 to +3 which were compared to Mastoparan-X with three basic residues and net charge +4. Previous studies revealed that these peptides have moderate-to-strong antibacterial activity against Gram-positive and Gram-negative microorganisms and some of them are hemolytic. Their affinity and lytic activity in zwitterionic vesicles decrease with the net electrical charges and the dose response curves are more cooperative for the less charged peptides. Higher charged peptides display higher affinity and lytic activity in anionic vesicles. The present study shows that the acidic residues play an important role in modulating the peptides' lytic and biological activities and influence differently when the peptide is hydrophobic or when the acidic residue is in a hydrophilic peptide.
Polybia-MP1 (IDWKKLLDAAKQIL-NH2), extracted from the Brazilian wasp Polybia paulista, exhibits a broad-spectrum bactericidal activity without being hemolytic and cytotoxic. In the present study, we analyzed the surface properties of the peptide and its interaction with DPPC in Langmuir monolayers. Polybia-MP1 formed stable monolayers, with lateral areas and surface potential values suggesting a mostly α-helical structure oriented near perpendicular to the membrane plane. In DPPC-peptide mixed monolayers, MP1 co-crystallized with the lipid forming branched domains only when the subphase was pure water. On subphases with high salt concentrations or at acidic or basic conditions, the peptide formed less densely packed films and was excluded from the domains, indicating the presence of attractive electrostatic interactions between peptides, which allow them to get closer to each other and to interact with DPPC probably as a consequence of a particular peptide arrangement. The residues responsible of the peptide-peptide attraction are suggested to be the anionic aspartic acids and the cationic lysines, which form a salt bridge, leading to oriented interactions in the crystal and thereby to branched domains. For this peptide, the balance between total attractive and repulsive interactions may be finely tuned by the aqueous ionic strength and pH, and since this effect is related with lysines and aspartic acids, similar effects may also occur in other peptides containing these residues in their sequences.
Static and time-resolved fluorescence of tryptophan and ortho-aminobenzoic acid was used to investigate the interaction of the synthetic antimicrobial peptide L1A (IDGLKAIWKKVADLLKNT-NH2) with POPC and POPC:POPG. N-acetylated (Ac-L1A) and N-terminus covalently bonded ortho-aminobenzoic acid (Abz-L1A-W8V) were also used. Static fluorescence and quenching by acrylamide showed that the peptides adsorption to the lipid bilayers was accompanied by spectral blue shift and by a decrease in fluorescence quenching, indicating that the peptides moved to a less polar environment probably buried in the lipidic phase of the vesicles. These results also suggest that the loss of the N-terminus charge allowed deeper fluorophore insertion in the bilayer. Despite the local character of spectroscopic information, conclusions can be drawn about the peptides as a whole. The dynamic behaviors of the peptides are such that the mean intensity lifetimes, the long correlation time and the residual anisotropy at long times increased when the peptides adsorb in lipid vesicles, being larger in anionic vesicles. From the steady-state increase in fluorescence intensity and anisotropy, we observed that the partition coefficient of peptides L1A and its Abz analog in both types of vesicles are higher than the acetylated analog; moreover, the affinity to the anionic vesicle is higher than to the zwitterionic.
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are part of the innate immune system of many species and are compounds with potential application against the development of resistant bacterial strains promoted by conventional antibiotics. The AMPs are rich in cationic and hydrophobic residues and act directly on the lipidic phase of the cell membranes. The MP1 has a broad-spectrum bactericide activity in both Gram-negative and positive bacteria, not being hemolytic or cytotoxic. H-MP1 is a synthetic analog of MP1 with lysines replaced by histidines so that its net charge could be responsive to changes in solution pH. In the present work, we investigated the effect of the solution pH on the structural properties, in the adsorption and insertion, and on the lytic activity of these peptides in lipid bilayers mimicking the cell membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, using experimental and computational biophysical techniques. The results indicate that the lytic activity of H-MP1 is sensitive to pH, increasing to an acidic environment, matching that of MP1, which is not influenced by solution pH. Molecular Dynamic simulations indicated that the adsorption process of both peptides started by the interaction of the N-terminus with the bilayer, followed by preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder. All rights reserved. No reuse allowed without permission.
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