Artículos de revistas
Reversing the peptide sequence impacts on molecular surface behaviour
Fecha
2016-03Registro en:
Ambroggio, Ernesto Esteban; Caruso, Benjamin; Villarreal, Marcos Ariel; Raussens, Vincent; Fidelio, Gerardo Daniel; Reversing the peptide sequence impacts on molecular surface behaviour; Elsevier Science; Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces; 139; 3-2016; 25-32
0927-7765
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Ambroggio, Ernesto Esteban
Caruso, Benjamin
Villarreal, Marcos Ariel
Raussens, Vincent
Fidelio, Gerardo Daniel
Resumen
The protein's primary structure has all the information for specific protein/peptide folding and, in many cases, can define specific amphiphilic regions along molecules that are important for interaction with membranes. In order to shed light on how peptide sequence is important for the surface properties of amphiphilic peptides, we designed three pairs of peptides with the following characteristics: (1) all molecules have the same hydrophobic residues; (2) the couples differ from each other in their hydrophilic amino acids: positively, negatively and non-charged; (3) each pair has the same residues (same global molecular hydrophobicity) but the primary structure is reversed in comparison to its partner (retro-isomer), giving a molecule with a hydrophilic N or C-terminus and a hydrophobic C or N-terminus. Using the Langmuir monolayer approach, we observed that sequence reversal has a central role in the lateral stability of peptide monolayers, in the ability of the molecules to partition into the air-water interface and in the rheological properties of peptide films, whereas the peptide's secondary structure, determined by ATR-FTIR, was the same for all peptides. Reversing the sequence also gives a differential way of peptide/lipid interaction when peptides are in the presence of POPC lipid bilayers. Our results show how sequence inversion confers a distinctive peptide surface behaviour and lipid interaction for molecules with a similar structure.
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