The helical order parameter of the 26-residue amphiphilic bee venom peptide melittin was measured by polarized attenuated total reflection infrared spectroscopy (ATR-IR) in dry phospholipid multibilayers (MBLs) and when bound to single supported planar bilayers (SPBs) under D2O. Melittin adopted an alpha-helical conformation in MBLs of dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC), 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC), a 4:1 mixture of POPC and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylglycerol (POPG), and when bound to SPBs of POPC:POPG (4:1). The order parameter of the alpha-helix in the bilayers depended mainly on the type of membrane preparation, and only little on the phospholipid composition of the bilayers. On hydrated SPBs, the helical order parameter was negative, indicating that the alpha-helix long axis of melittin was preferentially oriented parallel to the plane of the supported membrane. However, in dry MBLs, the helical order parameter was positive, indicating that the alpha-helix of melittin was preferentially oriented parallel to the phospholipid fatty acyl chains. It is concluded that the orientation of melittin in membranes depends on the degree of hydration of the model membranes rather than on the technique which is used for its determination. ATR-IR spectroscopy of polypeptides in or associated with supported planar membranes in D2O may become a useful tool for the determination of their orientation in and on membranes.
The synthetic 25-residue signal peptide of cytochrome c oxidase subunit IV was labelled with the fluorophor 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD) at its single cysteine residue. Addition of small unilamellar vesicles of 1-palmitoyl 2-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine (POPC) to the labelled peptide resulted in a shift of the NBD excitation and emission spectra to shorter wavelengths. Binding of the peptide to the vesicles was measured by the increase in the fluorescence emission yield. A surface partition constant of (3.9 +/- 0.5) x 10(3) M-1 was derived from these titrations. When the membrane contained, in addition to POPC, negatively charged 1-palmitoyl 2-oleoyl phosphatidylglycerol (POPG), the NBD fluorescence spectra were further shifted to shorter wavelengths and exhibited increased quantum yields. The apparent partition constants were increased to 10(4)-10(5) M-1 for vesicles with 20 or 100 mol% POPG. Lateral diffusion of the peptide was measured by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching in multibilayers of POPC, POPG, POPC/POPG (4:1) and 1,2-dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine. The lateral diffusion coefficients of the peptide in bilayers of POPC (8 x 10(-8) cm2/s at 21 degrees C) were 1.5-1.6-fold greater than those of NBD-labelled phospholipids (5 x 10(-8) cm2/s at 21 degrees C), but 1.5-1.8-fold smaller (3 x 10(-8) cm2/s in 20% POPG and at 21 degrees C) than the lipid diffusion coefficients in the negatively charged bilayers. It is concluded that the signal peptide associates with phospholipid bilayers in two different forms, which depend on the lipid charge. The experiments with POPC bilayers are well explained by a model in which the peptide partitions into the region of the phospholipid head-groups and diffuses along the membrane/water interface. If POPG is present in the membrane, electrostatic attractions between the basic residues of the peptide and the acidic lipid head-groups result in a deeper penetration of the bilayer. For this case, two models that are both consistent with the experimental data are discussed, in which the peptide either forms an oligomer of three to six partially helical membrane-spanning monomers, or inserts into the bilayer with its amphiphilic helical segment aligned parallel to the plane of the membrane and located near the head-group and outer hydrocarbon region of the bilayer.
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