Su Yongchao, Doherty Tim, Waring Alan J, Ruchala Piotr, Hong Mei
Department of Chemistry, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011, USA.
Biochemistry. 2009 Jun 2;48(21):4587-95. doi: 10.1021/bi900080d.
Cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) are small cationic peptides that cross the cell membrane while carrying macromolecular cargoes. We use solid-state NMR to investigate the structure and lipid interaction of two cationic residues, Arg(10) and Lys(13), in the CPP penetratin. (13)C chemical shifts indicate that Arg(10) adopts a rigid beta-strand conformation in the liquid-crystalline state of anionic lipid membranes. This behavior contrasts with all other residues observed so far in this peptide, which adopt a dynamic beta-turn conformation with coil-like chemical shifts at physiological temperature. Low-temperature (13)C-(31)P distances between the peptide and the lipid phosphates indicate that both the Arg(10) guanidinium Czeta atom and the Lys(13) Cepsilon atom are close to the lipid (31)P (4.0-4.2 A), proving the existence of charge-charge interaction for both Arg(10) and Lys(13) in the gel-phase membrane. However, since lysine substitution in CPPs is known to weaken their translocation ability, we propose that the low temperature stabilizes interactions of both lysine and arginine with the phosphates, whereas at high temperatures, the lysine-phosphate interaction is much weaker than the arginine-phosphate interaction. This is supported by the unusually high rigidity of the Arg(10) side chain and its beta-strand conformation at high temperatures. The latter is proposed to be important for ion pair formation by allowing close approach of the lipid headgroups to guanidinium side chains. (19)F and (13)C spin diffusion experiments indicate that penetratin is oligomerized into beta-sheets in gel-phase membranes. These solid-state NMR data indicate that guanidinium-phosphate interactions exist in penetratin, and guanidinium groups play a stronger structural role than ammonium groups in the lipid-assisted translocation of CPPs across liquid-crystalline cell membranes.
细胞穿透肽(CPPs)是一类小分子阳离子肽,能够携带大分子货物穿过细胞膜。我们使用固态核磁共振(NMR)技术研究了CPP穿膜肽中两个阳离子残基——精氨酸(Arg(10))和赖氨酸(Lys(13))的结构及其与脂质的相互作用。碳-13(¹³C)化学位移表明,在阴离子脂质膜的液晶态中,Arg(10) 呈现出刚性的β-链构象。这种行为与该肽中迄今观察到的所有其他残基形成对比,在生理温度下,这些残基呈现出具有类似线圈状化学位移的动态β-转角构象。肽与脂质磷酸基团之间的低温¹³C-³¹P距离表明,Arg(10) 的胍基ζ原子和Lys(13) 的ε碳原子均靠近脂质的³¹P(4.0 - 4.2 Å),这证明在凝胶相膜中Arg(10) 和Lys(13) 均存在电荷-电荷相互作用。然而,由于已知在CPPs中赖氨酸取代会削弱其转运能力,我们推测低温稳定了赖氨酸和精氨酸与磷酸基团的相互作用,而在高温下,赖氨酸-磷酸基团的相互作用比精氨酸-磷酸基团的相互作用弱得多。这一点得到了Arg(10) 侧链在高温下异常高的刚性及其β-链构象的支持。后者被认为对于离子对的形成很重要,因为它允许脂质头部基团与胍基侧链紧密靠近。¹⁹F和¹³C自旋扩散实验表明,穿膜肽在凝胶相膜中寡聚形成β-折叠片层。这些固态核磁共振数据表明穿膜肽中存在胍基-磷酸基团相互作用,并且在脂质辅助CPPs穿过液晶细胞膜的过程中,胍基比铵基发挥更强的结构作用。