Department of Pharmacy, Uppsala University, P.O. Box 580, SE-751 23 Uppsala, Sweden.
J Phys Chem B. 2010 Jan 28;114(3):1307-13. doi: 10.1021/jp910068t.
The influence of peptide hydrophobicity on the interaction between antimicrobial peptides and poly(acrylic acid) microgels was studied by end-tagging the kininogen-derived antimicrobial peptide GKHKNKGKKNGKHNGWK (GKH17) and its truncated variant KNKGKKNGKH (KNK10) with oligotryptophan groups of different lengths. Microgel deswelling and reswelling in response to peptide binding and release was studied by micromanipulator-assisted light- and fluorescence microscopy, peptide uptake in microgels was determined from solution depletion measurements, and peptide oligomerization was monitored by fluorescence spectroscopy. Results showed that oligomerization/aggregation of the hydrophobically end-tagged peptides is either absent or characterized by exposure of the tryptophan residues to the aqueous ambient, the latter suggesting small aggregation numbers. In addition, peptide uptake and affinity to the poly(acrylic acid) microgels increase with the number of tryptophan residues in the hydrophobic end tag, whereas peptide-induced microgel deswelling kinetics did not display this tag-length dependence to the same extent. Instead, long end tags resulted in anomalous shell formation, opposing further peptide-induced network deswelling. Theoretical modeling suggested that the deswelling kinetics in response to peptide binding is largely controlled by stagnant layer diffusion, but also that for peptides with sufficiently long hydrophobic tags, the shell constitutes an additional diffusion barrier, thus resulting in slower microgel deswelling. In addition, GKH17 and KNK10 peptides lacking the tryptophan end tags were substantially released on reducing peptide-microgel electrostatic interactions through addition of salt, an effect more pronounced for the shorter KNK10 peptide, whereas the hydrophobically end-tagged peptides remained bound to the microgels also at high ionic strength.
通过在激肽原衍生的抗菌肽 GKHKNKGKKNGKHNGWK(GKH17)及其截断变体 KNKGKKNGKH(KNK10)的末端标记不同长度的寡色氨酸基团,研究了肽疏水性对抗菌肽与聚丙烯酸(PAA)微凝胶相互作用的影响。通过微操纵器辅助的光和荧光显微镜研究了微凝胶对肽结合和释放的响应,通过溶液耗竭测量确定了微凝胶中肽的摄取,通过荧光光谱监测了肽的寡聚化。结果表明,疏水性末端标记肽的寡聚/聚集要么不存在,要么表现为色氨酸残基暴露于水相环境中,后者表明聚合数较小。此外,肽的摄取和对聚(丙烯酸)微凝胶的亲和力随疏水末端标记中色氨酸残基的数量增加而增加,而肽诱导的微凝胶溶胀动力学并没有表现出这种标签长度依赖性。相反,长的末端标签导致异常的壳形成,反对进一步的肽诱导的网络溶胀。理论模型表明,响应肽结合的溶胀动力学主要由停滞层扩散控制,但对于具有足够长疏水性末端标签的肽,壳构成了额外的扩散障碍,从而导致微凝胶溶胀更慢。此外,通过添加盐来降低肽-微凝胶静电相互作用,缺乏色氨酸末端标签的 GKH17 和 KNK10 肽大量释放,对于较短的 KNK10 肽,这种效应更为明显,而疏水性末端标记的肽即使在高离子强度下也仍然与微凝胶结合。