Concentration-dependent realignment of the antimicrobial peptide PGLa in lipid membranes observed by solid-state19F-NMR

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Abstract

The membrane-disruptive antimicrobial peptide PGLa is found to change its orientation in a dimyristoyl-phosphatidylcholine bilayer when its concentration is increased to biologically active levels. The alignment of the α-helix was determined by highly sensitive solid-state NMR measurements of 19F dipolar couplings on CF3-labeled side chains, and supported by a nonperturbing 15N label. At a low peptide/lipid ratio of 1:200 the amphiphilic peptide resides on the membrane surface in the so-called S-state, as expected. However, at high peptide concentration (≥1:50 molar ratio) the helix axis changes its tilt angle from ∼90° to ∼120°, with the C-terminus pointing toward the bilayer interior. This tilted "T-state" represents a novel feature of antimicrobial peptides, which is distinct from a membrane-inserted I-state. At intermediate concentration, PGLa is in exchange between the S- and T-state in the timescale of the NMR experiment. In both states the peptide molecules undergo fast rotation around the membrane normal in liquid crystalline bilayers; hence, large peptide aggregates do not form. Very likely the obliquely tilted T-state represents an antiparallel dimer of PGLa that is formed in the membrane at increasing concentration. © 2005 by the Biophysical Society.

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Glaser, R. W., Sachse, C., Dürr, U. H. N., Wadhwani, P., Afonin, S., Strandberg, E., & Ulrich, A. S. (2005). Concentration-dependent realignment of the antimicrobial peptide PGLa in lipid membranes observed by solid-state19F-NMR. Biophysical Journal, 88(5), 3392–3397. https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.104.056424

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