Photo-Crosslinking Analysis of Preferential Interactions between a Transmembrane Peptide and Matching Lipids

In this study, a novel method is presented by which the molecular environment of a transmembrane peptide can be investigated directly. This was achieved by incorporating a photoactivatable crosslinking probe in the hydrophobic segment of a model transmembrane peptide. When this peptide was incorpora...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biochemistry (Easton) 2004-04, Vol.43 (15), p.4482-4489
Hauptverfasser: Ridder, Anja N. J. A, Spelbrink, Robin E. J, Demmers, Jeroen A. A, Rijkers, Dirk T. S, Liskamp, Rob M. J, Brunner, Josef, Heck, Albert J. R, de Kruijff, Ben, Killian, J. Antoinette
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In this study, a novel method is presented by which the molecular environment of a transmembrane peptide can be investigated directly. This was achieved by incorporating a photoactivatable crosslinking probe in the hydrophobic segment of a model transmembrane peptide. When this peptide was incorporated into lipid bilayers and irradiated with UV light, a covalent bond was formed between the crosslinking probe and a lipid. This crosslinking reaction could be visualized by sodium dodecyl sulfate−polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and the resulting product could be characterized by mass spectrometry. By use of phospholipases, it was demonstrated that the peptide crosslinks to both acyl chains of the lipids. The peptide showed a clear preference to partition into fluid lipids and was excluded from lipids in the gel phase. However, when the peptide was incorporated into bilayers containing two lipid species with different acyl chain lengths, molecular sorting of the lipids around the peptide based on hydrophobic matching was not observed. It is proposed that the size of the transmembrane part plays an important role in the dynamic interactions of membrane proteins with the surrounding lipids and hence in determining whether molecular sorting can occur.
ISSN:0006-2960
1520-4995
DOI:10.1021/bi049899d