Anoplin, an antimicrobial, helical decapeptide from wasp venom, looses its biological activities by mere deamidation of its C-terminus. Secondary structure determination, by circular dichroism spectroscopy in amphipathic environments, and lytic activity in zwitterionic and anionic vesicles showed quite similar results for the amidated and the carboxylated forms of the peptide. The deamidation of the C-terminus introduced a negative charge at an all-positive charged peptide, causing a loss of amphipathicity, as indicated by molecular dynamics simulations in TFE/water mixtures and this subtle modification in a peptide's primary structure disturbed the interaction with bilayers and biological membranes. Although being poorly lytic, the amidated form, but not the carboxylated, presented ion channel-like activity on anionic bilayers with a well-defined conductance step; at approximately the same concentration it showed antimicrobial activity. The pores remain open at trans-negative potentials, preferentially conducting cations, and this situation is equivalent to the interaction of the peptide with bacterial membranes that also maintain a high negative potential inside.
Many potent antimicrobial peptides also present hemolytic activity, an undesired collateral effect for the therapeutic application. Unlike other mastoparan peptides, Polybia-MP1 (IDWKKLLDAAKQIL), obtained from the venom of the social wasp Polybia paulista, is highly selective of bacterial cells. The study of its mechanism of action demonstrated that it permeates vesicles at a greater rate of leakage on the anionic over the zwitterionic, impaired by the presence of cholesterol or cardiolipin; its lytic activity is characterized by a threshold peptide to lipid molar ratio that depends on the phospholipid composition of the vesicles. At these particular threshold concentrations, the apparent average pore number is distinctive between anionic and zwitterionic vesicles, suggesting that pores are similarly formed depending on the ionic character of the bilayer. To prospect the molecular reasons for the strengthened selectivity in Polybia-MP1 and its absence in Mastoparan-X, MD simulations were carried out. Both peptides presented amphipathic alpha-helical structures, as previously observed in Circular Dichroism spectra, with important differences in the extension and stability of the helix; their backbone solvation analysis also indicate a different profile, suggesting that the selectivity of Polybia-MP1 is a consequence of the distribution of the charged and polar residues along the peptide helix, and on how the solvent molecules orient themselves according to these electrostatic interactions. We suggest that the lack of hemolytic activity of Polybia-MP1 is due to the presence and position of Asp residues that enable the equilibrium of electrostatic interactions and favor the preference for the more hydrophilic environment.
We study energy localization on the oscillator chain proposed by Peyrard and Bishop to model DNA. We search numerically for conditions with initial energy in a small subgroup of consecutive oscillators of a finite chain and such that the oscillation amplitude is small outside this subgroup on a long time scale. We use a localization criterion based on the information entropy and verify numerically that such localized excitations exist when the nonlinear dynamics of the subgroup oscillates with a frequency inside the reactive band of the linear chain. We predict a mimium value for the Morse parameter ͑ Ͼ 2.25͒ (the only parameter of our normalized model), in agreement with the numerical calculations (an estimate for the biological value is = 6.3). For supercritical masses, we use canonical perturbation theory to expand the frequencies of the subgroup and we calculate an energy threshold in agreement with the numerical calculations.
SynopsisThe interaction of daunomycin with ctDNA and six purine-pyrimidine alternating polydeoxymcleotides has been studied using fluorometric and uv-visible absorption methods. In the explored binding range of r > 0.05, the intercalation of the drug into the DNAs proved to be anticooperative, as indicated by the pronounced upward curvature of all the Scatchard plots obtained. The experimental data have been analyzed according to the recent theory of Friedman and Manning, which describes the polyelectrolyte effects on the site binding equilibria, drug intercalation included. We found that, accounting for the polyelectrolyte effects in the neighbor site exclusion model, the experimental data were nearly equally well described, in a wide range of binding ratias, by assuming the presence of sequence specificity effects (site size = 2 base pairs, exclusion parameter n = 1) or its absence (site size = 1 base pair, n = 1.7). The relevant results are as follows: (a) Daunomycin binds to all the DNAs considered with a stoichiometry of approximately 1 drug for every two base pairs. (b) The anticooperative nature of the interaction is essentially polyelectrolytic in origin. (c) The binding afEnity shown by the drug for the different sites considered decreases in the order of Gm5C > AT > AC-GT > IC > GC > AU, indicating a stabilizing effect of the -CH, group in pasition 5 of the pyrimidines. (d) The extent of quenching of the intrinsic fluorescence of daunomycin in the presence of DNA is bound to the presence, at the intercalation site, of a guanine residue, since GC, Gm'C, and AC-GT sites induce a nearly total quenching, whereas AT, AU, and IC sites act only partially in this respect. The structural results obtained from the daunomycin-d[(CGTACG)], crystal suggest that the 2-NH2 group of guanine might be responsible for such a phenomenon. The influence of both the temperature and the ionic strength on the free energy of drug intercalation into ctDNA, poly[d(G-C)] : poly[d(G-C)], and poly[d(A-C)] : poly[d(G-T)] is examined and d i s c u s s e d . *On leave of absence from the Physics Department, Institute of Biosciences-UNESP, 15100 S. J d do KO Preto, (SP) Brasil.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.