Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.118, No.43, 12462-12470, 2014
Peptides with the Same Composition, Hydrophobicity, and Hydrophobic Moment Bind to Phospholipid Bilayers with Different Affinities
We investigated the dependence of membrane binding on amino acid sequence for a series of amphipathic peptides derived from delta-lysin. delta-Lysin is a 26 amino acid, N-terminally formylated, hemolytic peptide that forms an amphipathic alpha-helix bound at membranewater interfaces. A shortened peptide, lysette, was derived from delta-lysin by deletion of the four N-terminal amino acid residues. Five variants of lysette were synthesized by altering the amino acid sequence such that the overall hydrophobic moment remained essentially the same for all peptides. Peptidelipid equilibrium dissociation constants and helicities of peptides bound to zwitterionic lipid vesicles were determined by stopped-flow fluorescence and circular dichroism. We found that binding to phosphatidylcholine bilayers was a function of the helicity of the bound peptide alone and independent of the a priori hydrophobic moment or the ability to form intramolecular salt bridges. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations on two of the peptides suggest that sequence determines the insertion depth into the bilayer. The location of the two aspartate residues at the C-terminus of lysette-2 leads to a loss of helical content in the simulations, which correlates with faster desorption from the bilayer as compared to lysette. We also found a systematic deviation of the experimentally determined dissociation constant and that predicted by the WimleyWhite interfacial hydrophobicity scale. The reason for the discrepancy remains unresolved but appears to correlate with a predominance of isoleucine over leucine residues in the lysette family of peptides.