These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Polymyxin binding to charged lipid membranes. An example of cooperative lipid-protein interaction.
    Author: Hartmann W, Galla HJ, Sackmann E.
    Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta; 1978 Jun 16; 510(1):124-39. PubMed ID: 208605.
    Abstract:
    The binding of polymyxin-B to lipid bilayer vesicles of synthetic phosphatidic acid was studied using fluorescence, ESR spectroscopy and electron microscopy. 1,6-Diphenylhexatriene (which exhibits polarized fluorescence) and pyrene decanoic acid (which forms excimers) were used as fluorescence probes to study the lipid phase transition. The polymyxin binds strongly to negatively charged lipid layers. As a result of lipid/polymyxin chain-chain interactions, the transition temperature of the lipid. This can be explained in terms of a slight expansion of the crystalline lipid lattice (Lindeman's rule). Upon addition of polymyxin to phosphatidic acid vesicles two rather sharp phase transitions (width deltaT = 5 degrees C) are observed. The upper transition (at Tu) is that of the pure lipid and the lower transition (at T1) concerns the lipid bound to the peptide. The sharpness of these transitions strongly indicates that the bilayer is characterized by a heterogeneous lateral distribution of free and bound lipid regions, one in the crystalline and the other in the fluid state. Such a domain structure was directly observed by electron microscopy (freeze etching technique). In (1 : 1) mixtures of dipalmitoyl phosphatidic acid and egg lecithin, polymyxin induces the formation of domains of charged lipid within the fluid regions of egg lecithin. With both fluorescence methods the fraction of lipid bound to polymyxin-B as a function of the peptide concentration was determined. S-shaped binding curves were obtained. The same type of binding curve is obtained for the interaction of Ca2+ with phosphatidic acid lamellae, while the binding of polylysine to such membranes is characterized by a linear or Langmuir type binding curve. The S-shaped binding curve can be explained in terms of a cooperative lipid-ligand (Ca2+, polymyxin) interaction. A model is proposed which explains the association of polymyxin within the membrane plane in terms of elastic forces caused by the elastic distortion of the (liquid crystalline) lipid layer by this highly asymmetric peptide.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]