TY - JOUR
T1 - C-terminally shortened alamethicin on templates
T2 - Influence of the linkers on conductances
AU - Duclohier, Hervé
AU - Kociolek, Karol
AU - Stasiak, Marcin
AU - Leplawy, Miroslaw T.
AU - Marshall, Garland R.
N1 - Funding Information:
M.T.L. acknowledges financial support from the Polish–American M. Sklodowska-Curie Fund II (Grant MZ/HHS-94-168). H.D. expresses many thanks to Mark Sansom (Laboratory of Molecular Biophysics, Oxford University) for sharing with him some of the samples used in this study and for access to his conductance set-up.
PY - 1999/8/20
Y1 - 1999/8/20
N2 - In order to test the influence of chemical modifications designed to allow covalent coupling of channel-forming peptide motifs into variable sized oligomers, a series of alamethicin derivatives was prepared. The building block encompassing the N-terminal 1-17 residues of alamethicin behaved normally in the conductance assay on planar lipid bilayers, albeit at higher concentration and with a slightly reduced voltage-dependence. A linker Ac-K-OCH2C6H4CH3p attached via the epsilon amino group of lysine to the C-terminus of alamethicin(1-17) increased membrane affinity. The latter was further enhanced in a dimer and a tetramer in which alamethicin(1-17) chains were tethered to di- or tetra-lysine linkers, respectively, but macroscopic current-voltage curves displayed much reduced voltage-dependencies and reversed hysteresis. An usual behaviour with high voltage-dependence was restored with the modified dimer of alamethicin(1-17) in which alanine separated the two consecutive lysine residues in the linker. Of special interest was the development of a 'negative resistance' branch in macroscopic current-voltage curves for low concentrations of this dimer with the more flexible linker. Single channel events displayed only one single open state with fast kinetics and whose conductance matches that of the alamethicin heptamer or octamer. Copyright (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V.
AB - In order to test the influence of chemical modifications designed to allow covalent coupling of channel-forming peptide motifs into variable sized oligomers, a series of alamethicin derivatives was prepared. The building block encompassing the N-terminal 1-17 residues of alamethicin behaved normally in the conductance assay on planar lipid bilayers, albeit at higher concentration and with a slightly reduced voltage-dependence. A linker Ac-K-OCH2C6H4CH3p attached via the epsilon amino group of lysine to the C-terminus of alamethicin(1-17) increased membrane affinity. The latter was further enhanced in a dimer and a tetramer in which alamethicin(1-17) chains were tethered to di- or tetra-lysine linkers, respectively, but macroscopic current-voltage curves displayed much reduced voltage-dependencies and reversed hysteresis. An usual behaviour with high voltage-dependence was restored with the modified dimer of alamethicin(1-17) in which alanine separated the two consecutive lysine residues in the linker. Of special interest was the development of a 'negative resistance' branch in macroscopic current-voltage curves for low concentrations of this dimer with the more flexible linker. Single channel events displayed only one single open state with fast kinetics and whose conductance matches that of the alamethicin heptamer or octamer. Copyright (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V.
KW - Alamethicin oligomer
KW - Conductance
KW - Peptaibol
KW - Planar lipid bilayer
KW - Voltage-gated channel
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0032774824
U2 - 10.1016/S0005-2736(99)00047-4
DO - 10.1016/S0005-2736(99)00047-4
M3 - Article
C2 - 10446286
AN - SCOPUS:0032774824
SN - 0005-2736
VL - 1420
SP - 14
EP - 22
JO - Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - Biomembranes
JF - Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - Biomembranes
IS - 1-2
ER -