Abstract

The histidine-rich peptides of the LAH4 family were designed using cationic antimicrobial peptides such as magainin and PGLa as templates. The LAH4 amphipathic helical sequences exhibit a multitude of interesting biological properties such as antimicrobial activity, cell penetration of a large variety of cargo and lentiviral transduction enhancement. The parent peptide associates with lipid bilayers where it changes from an orientation along the membrane interface into a transmembrane configuration in a pH-dependent manner. Here we show that LAH4 adopts a transmembrane configuration in fully saturated DMPC membranes already at pH3.5, i.e. much below the pKa of the histidines whereas the transition pH in POPC correlates closely with histidine neutralization. In contrast in POPG membranes the in-planar configuration is stabilized by about one pH unit. The differences in pH can be converted into energetic contributions for the in-plane to transmembrane transition equilibrium, where the shift in the transition pH due to lipid saturation corresponds to energies which are otherwise obtained by the exchange of several cationic with hydrophobic residues. A similar dependence on lipid saturation has also been observed when the PGLa and magainin antimicrobial peptides interact within lipid bilayers suggesting that the quantitative evaluation presented in this paper also applies to other membrane polypeptides.

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