Melittin is a prototype of the ubiquitous antimicrobial peptides that induce pores in membranes. It is commonly used as a molecular device for membrane permeabilization. Even at concentrations in the nanomolar range, melittin can induce transient pores that allow transmembrane conduction of atomic ions but not leakage of glucose or larger molecules. At micromolar concentrations, melittin induces stable pores allowing transmembrane leakage of molecules up to tens of kilodaltons, corresponding to its antimicrobial activities. Despite extensive studies, aspects of the molecular mechanism for pore formation remain unclear. To clarify the mechanism, one must know the states of the melittin-bound membrane before and after the process. By correlating experiments using giant unilamellar vesicles with those of peptide-lipid multilayers, we found that melittin bound on the vesicle translocated and redistributed to both sides of the membrane before the formation of stable pores. Furthermore, stable pores are formed only above a critical peptide-to-lipid ratio. The initial states for transient and stable pores are different, which implies different mechanisms at low and high peptide concentrations. To determine the lipidic structure of the pore, the pores in peptide-lipid multilayers were induced to form a lattice and examined by anomalous X-ray diffraction. The electron density distribution of lipid labels shows that the pore is formed by merging of two interfaces through a hole. The molecular property of melittin is such that it adsorbs strongly to the bilayer interface. Pore formation can be viewed as the bilayer adopting a lipid configuration to accommodate its excessive interfacial area.toroidal pore | oriented circular dichroism | rhombohedral phase M elittin, the major toxin of the bee venom discovered around 1970 (1), produces a variety of effects on nature membranes, including cell lysis (2), antimicrobial activity (3), and voltage-dependent ion conductance (4). A great number of hostdefense antimicrobial peptides (5, 6) discovered in the past three decades have been found to exhibit similar behavior of melittin (3, 7). Among membrane-active peptides, melittin is perhaps the most extensively studied (8-12). It is widely used for cell and liposome lysis and as a model for pore-forming peptides (7, 13). Its whole and partial amino acid sequences have been incorporated in the designs of synthetic proteins to mimic the property of melittin (14, 15). However, its molecular process and mechanism of activities are still in dispute. It is clear that melittin binds to membranes as monomers but acts on the membrane collectively. Even at concentrations as low as a few nanomoles per liter, melittin can induce transient pores that allow transmembrane conduction of atomic ions but not leakage of glucose or larger molecules (4,7,16). In the micromolar range, melittin induces stable pores allowing transmembrane leakage of molecules up to tens of kilodaltons (13,17,18). At even higher concentrations, it can act as a detergent disin...
Antimicrobial peptides are known to form pores in cell membranes. We study this process in model bilayers of various lipid compositions. We use two of the best-studied peptides, alamethicin and melittin, to represent peptides making two types of pores, that is, barrel-stave pores and toroidal pores. In both cases, the key control variable is the concentration of the bound peptides in the lipid bilayers (expressed in the peptide-lipid molar ratio, P/L). The method of oriented circular dichroism (OCD) was used to monitor the peptide orientation in bilayers as a function of P/L. The same samples were scanned by X-ray diffraction to measure the bilayer thickness. In all cases, the bilayer thickness decreases linearly with P/L and then levels off after P/L exceeds a lipid-dependent critical value, (P/L)*. OCD spectra showed that the helical peptides are oriented parallel to the bilayers as long as P/L < (P/L)*, but as P/L increases over (P/L)*, an increasing fraction of peptides changed orientation to become perpendicular to the bilayer. We analyzed the data by assuming an internal membrane tension associated with the membrane thinning. The free energy containing this tension term leads to a relation explaining the P/L-dependence observed in the OCD and X-ray diffraction measurements. We extracted the experimental parameters from this thermodynamic relation. We believe that they are the quantities that characterize the peptide-lipid interactions related to the mechanism of pore formation. We discuss the meaning of these parameters and compare their values for different lipids and for the two different types of pores. These experimental parameters are useful for further molecular analysis and are excellent targets for molecular dynamic simulation studies.Membrane active peptides, including antimicrobials and toxins, are known to induce transmembrane pores. The first peptide discovered to do so is alamethicin (1, 2). At first, alamethicin was thought to induce pores (which were detected by ion conduction) only by a transmembrane electric potential (see review in ref 3). However, numerous experiments (4-8) indicated that alamethicin could insert into bilayers in the absence of an external field (see review in ref 9). Although it was believed that alamethicin insertion would create pores, a direct correlation with ion conduction was difficult to establish. Later, with the combination of oriented circular dichroism (10, 11) and neutron diffraction (12, 13), we showed the direct correlation between alamethicin insertion (without voltage) and transmembrane pores. Two other extensively studied peptides, bee venom toxin melittin (14) and frog peptide magainin (15), also exhibited similar behaviors. Pores were evidently formed by both melittin (16-18) and magainin (19,20) because they caused leakage of fluorescent dyes from lipid vesicles. In the last 15 years, a great variety of antimicrobial peptides have been shown to induce transmembrane pores in bacterial cells as well as in lipid vesicles (see reviews in refs 2...
We suggest a physical mechanism by which antimicrobial peptides spontaneously induce stable pores in membranes. Peptide binding to a lipid bilayer causes an internal stress, or internal membrane tension, that can be sufficiently strong to create pores. Like detergents, peptides have a high affinity for the rim of the pore. Binding to the rims reduces the line tension and decreases the number of peptides causing the internal membrane tension. Consequently, the pore radius is stable. The pore formation resembles a phase transition.
The condensing effect of cholesterol on phospholipid bilayers was systematically investigated for saturated and unsaturated chains, as a function of cholesterol concentration. X-ray lamellar diffraction was used to measure the phosphate-to-phosphate distances, PtP, across the bilayers. The measured PtP increases nonlinearly with the cholesterol concentration until it reaches a maximum. With further increase of cholesterol concentration, the PtP remains at the maximum level until the cholesterol content reaches the solubility limit. The data in all cases can be quantitatively explained with a simple model that cholesterol forms complexes with phospholipids in the bilayers. The phospholipid molecules complexed with cholesterol are lengthened and this lengthening effect extends into the uncomplexed phospholipids surrounding the cholesterol complexes. This long-range thickening effect is similar to the effect of gramicidin on the thickness of lipid bilayers due to hydrophobic matching.
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