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Title: Solid-state NMR analysis comparing the designer-made antibiotic MSI-103 with its parent peptide PGLa in lipid bilayers. Author: Strandberg E, Kanithasen N, Tiltak D, Bürck J, Wadhwani P, Zwernemann O, Ulrich AS. Journal: Biochemistry; 2008 Feb 26; 47(8):2601-16. PubMed ID: 18220419. Abstract: The amphiphilic alpha-helical peptide (KIAGKIA)3-NH2 (MSI-103) is a designer-made antibiotic, based on the natural sequence of PGLa from Xenopus laevis. Here, we have characterized the concentration-dependent alignment and dynamic behavior of MSI-103 in lipid membranes by solid-state 2H and 19F NMR, using orientational constraints from seven Ala-d3-labeled analogues and five 4-CF3-phenylglycine labels. As previously found for PGLa, MSI-103, too, assumes a flat surface-bound S-state alignment at low peptide concentrations, and it also realigns to a tilted T-state at higher concentrations. For PGLa, the stability of the T-state had been attributed to the specific assembly of antiparallel dimers; hence, it is remarkable that the artificial KIAGKIA repeat sequence can also dimerize in the same way in liquid crystalline lipid bilayers. Oriented circular dichroism analysis shows that for MSI-103 the threshold for realignment from the S-state to the T-state is approximately 3-fold lower than for PGLa (at a peptide-to-lipid ratio of 1:240 in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine, compared to 1:80). Furthermore, MSI-103 becomes laterally immobilized in the lipid bilayer at a concentration ratio of 1:50, which occurs for PGLa only above 1:20. The superior antimicrobial activity of MSI-103 over PGLa thus appears to correlate with its stronger tendency to realign and self-assemble. The hemolytic activities of MSI-103 and its analogues, on the other hand, are shown here to correlate purely with the respective changes in hydrophobicity.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]