The fusion peptide of HIV-1 gp41 is formed by the 16 N-terminal residues of the protein. This 16-amino acid peptide, in common with several other viral fusion peptides, caused a reduction in the bilayer to hexagonal phase transition temperature of dipalmitoleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (T(H)), suggesting its ability to promote negative curvature in membranes. Surprisingly, an elongated peptide corresponding to the 33 N-terminal amino acids raised T(H), although it was more potent than the 16-amino acid fusion peptide in inducing lipid mixing with large unilamellar liposomes of 1:1:1 dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine/dioleoylphosphatidylcholine/choleste rol. The 17-amino acid C-terminal fragment of the peptide can induce membrane fusion by itself, if it is anchored to a membrane by palmitoylation of the amino terminus, indicating that the additional 17 hydrophilic amino acids contribute to the fusogenic potency of the peptide. This is not solely a consequence of the palmitoylation, as a random peptide with the same amino acid composition with a palmitoyl anchor was less potent in promoting membrane fusion and palmitic acid itself had no fusogenic activity. The 16-amino acid N-terminal fusion peptide and the longer 33-amino acid peptide were labeled with NBD. Fluorescence binding studies indicate that both peptides bind to the membrane with similar affinities, indicating that the increased fusogenic activity of the longer peptide was not a consequence of a greater extent of membrane partitioning. We also determined the secondary structure of the peptides using FTIR spectroscopy. We find that the amino-terminal fusion peptide is inserted into the membrane as a beta-sheet and the 17 C-terminal amino acids lie on the surface of the membrane, adopting an alpha-helical conformation. It was further demonstrated with the use of rhodamine-labeled peptides that the 33-amino acid peptide self-associated in the membrane while the 16-amino acid N-terminal peptide did not. Thus, the 16-amino acid N-terminal fusion peptide of HIV inserts into the membrane and, like other viral fusion peptides, lowers T(H). In addition, the 17 consecutive amino acids enhance the fusogenic activity of the fusion peptide presumably by promoting its self-association.
The fusion domain of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein (gp120-gp41) is a conserved hydrophobic region located at the N-terminus of the transmembrane subunit (gp41). A prominent feature of this domain is a conserved five-residue "FLGFL" sequence at positions 8-12. Mutation of the highly conserved Phe(11) to Val (F11V), presumed not to significantly affect the hydrophobicity and the structure of this region, has been shown to decrease the level of syncytium formation and virus infectivity. Here we show that the substitution of Gly for Phe(11) (F11G) reduces cell-cell fusion activity by 80-90%. To determine the effect of these mutations on the properties of the fusion peptide, a 33-residue peptide (WT) identical to the extended fusion domain and its F11V and F11G mutants were synthesized, fluorescently labeled, and studied with respect to their function, structure, and organization in phospholipid membranes. The WT peptide alone induced fusion of both zwitterionic (PC/Chol) and negatively charged (PS/PC/Chol and POPG) vesicles, in contrast to a 23-mer fusion peptide lacking the C-terminal domain which has been shown to be inactive with PC vesicles but able to induce fusion of POPG vesicles which had been preaggragated with Ca(2+) or Mg(2+). The F11V peptide preserved 50% activity, and the F11G peptide was virtually inactive. ATR-FTIR spectroscopy indicated similar secondary structure of the peptides in multibilayers that was independent of membrane composition. Furthermore, all the peptides increased the extent of lipid disorder to a similar extent, but the kinetics of amide II H to D exchange was in the following order: F11G > F11V > WT. Fluorescence studies in the presence of membranes, as well as SDS-PAGE, revealed that the WT and F11V peptides self-associate to similar levels while F11G exhibited a decreased level of self-association. The data suggest that the FLGFL motif contributes to the functional organization of the HIV-1 fusion peptide and that the C-terminal domain following the fusion peptide contributes to the membrane fusion process.
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