Abstract
The membrane-destabilization properties of the recently-introduced endosomolytic CM18-Tat11 hybrid peptide (KWKLFKKIGAVLKVLTTG-YGRKKRRQRRR, residues 1-7 of cecropin-A, 2-12 of melittin, and 47-57 of HIV-1 Tat protein) are investigated in CHO-K1 cells by using the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique. CM18-Tat 11, CM18, and Tat11 peptides are administered to the cell membrane with a computer-controlled micro-perfusion system. CM 18-Tat11 induces irreversible cell-membrane permeabilization at concentrations (≥4 μM) at which CM18 triggers transient pore formation, and Tat11 does not affect membrane integrity. We argue that the addition of the Tat11 module to CM 18 is able to trigger a shift in the mechanism of membrane destabilization from "toroidal" to "carpet", promoting a detergent-like membrane disruption. Collectively, these results rationalize previous observations on CM18-Tat11 delivery properties that we believe can guide the engineering of new modular peptides tailored to specific cargo-delivery applications.
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Fasoli, A., Salomone, F., Benedusi, M., Boccardi, C., Rispoli, G., Beltram, F., & Cardarelli, F. (2014). Mechanistic insight into CM18-Tat11 peptide membrane-perturbing action by whole-cell patch-clamp recording. Molecules, 19(7), 9228–9239. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules19079228
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