Abstract

The conformation of gramicidin in diacylphosphatidylcholine model membranes was investigated as a function of the solvent in which peptide and lipid are initially codissolved. By use of circular dichroism it is demonstrated that, upon removal of the solvent and hydration of the mixed gramicidin/lipid film, it is the conformational behavior of the peptide in the organic solvent that determines its final conformation in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine model membranes. As a consequence, parameters that influence the conformation of the peptide in the solvent also play an essential role, such as the gramicidin concentration and the rate of interconversion between different conformations. Of the various solvents investigated, only with trifluoroethanol is it possible directly to incorporate gramicidin entirely in the beta 6.3-helical (channel) configuration. It is also shown that the conformation of gramicidin in the membrane varies with the peptide/lipid ratio, most likely as a result of intermolecular gramicidin-gramicidin interactions at higher peptide/lipid ratios, and that heat incubation leads to a conformational change in the direction of the beta 6.3-helical conformation. Using lipids with an acyl chain length varying from 12 carbon atoms in dilauroylphosphatidylcholine to 22 carbon atoms in dierucoylphosphatidylcholine, it was possible to investigate the acyl chain length dependence of the gramicidin conformation in model membranes prepared from these lipids with the use of different solvent systems. It is demonstrated for each solvent system that the distribution between different conformations is relatively independent of the acyl chain length but that the rate at which the conformation converts toward the beta 6.3-helical configuration upon heating of the samples is affected by the length of the acyl chain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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