HIV-1 and influenza viral fusion peptides are biologically relevant model fusion systems and, in this study, their membrane-associated structures were probed by solid-state NMR (13)C chemical shift measurements. The influenza peptide IFP-L2CF3N contained a (13)C carbonyl label at Leu-2 and a (15)N label at Phe-3 while the HIV-1 peptide HFP-UF8L9G10 was uniformly (13)C and (15)N labeled at Phe-8, Leu-9 and Gly-10. The membrane composition of the IFP-L2CF3N sample was POPC-POPG (4:1) and the membrane composition of the HFP-UF8L9G10 sample was a mixture of lipids and cholesterol which approximately reflects the lipid headgroup and cholesterol composition of host cells of the HIV-1 virus. In one-dimensional magic angle spinning spectra, labeled backbone (13)C were selectively observed using a REDOR filter of the (13)C-(15)N dipolar coupling. Backbone chemical shifts were very similar at -50 and 20 degrees C, which suggests that low temperature does not appreciably change the peptide structure. Relative to -50 degrees C, the 20 degrees C spectra had narrower signals with lower integrated intensity, which is consistent with greater motion at the higher temperature. The Leu-2 chemical shift in the IFP-L2CF3N sample correlates with a helical structure at this residue and is consistent with detection of helical structure by other biophysical techniques. Two-dimensional (13)C-(13)C correlation spectra were obtained for the HFP-UF8L9G10 sample and were used to assign the chemical shifts of all of the (13)C labels in the peptide. Secondary shift analysis was consistent with a beta-strand structure over these three residues. The high signal-to-noise ratio of the 2D spectra suggests that membrane-associated fusion peptides with longer sequences of labeled amino acids can also be assigned with 2D and 3D methods.
Clean MAS observation of 13 C-labeled carbons in membrane-bound HIV-1 and influenza fusion peptides was made by using a rotational-echo double-resonance spectroscopy (REDOR) filter of directly bonded 13 C-15 N pairs. The clean filtering achieved with the REDOR approach is superior to filtering done with sample difference spectroscopy. In one labeling approach, the peptide had labels at a single 13 C carbonyl and its directly bonded 15 N. The resulting chemical shift distribution of the filtered signal is used to assess the distribution of local secondary structures at the labeled carbonyl. For the influenza peptide, the Leu-2 carbonyl chemical shift distribution is shown to vary markedly with lipid and detergent composition, as well as peptide:lipid ratio, suggesting that the local peptide structure also has a strong dependence on these factors. Because most carboxylic-and amino-labeled amino acids are commercially available, this REDOR approach should have broad applicability to chemically synthesized peptides as well as bacterially synthesized proteins. In a second labeling approach, the HIV-1 fusion peptide had U-13 C, 15 N labeling over three sequential residues. When a 1.6 ms REDOR dephasing time is used, only backbone 13 C signals are observed. The resulting spectra are used to determine spectral linewidths and to assess feasibility of assignment of uniformly labeled peptide.
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