Abstract

A novel helical hexadecapeptide carrying a poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) chain at the N terminal was synthesized. The N and C terminals of the compound are labeled with a fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) group and an N-ethylcarbazolyl group (ECz), respectively. An octapeptide carrying the same groups and a hexadecapeptide without a PEG chain were also synthesized and used as control. A mixture of the peptide and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine was sonicated in a buffer to prepare the liposome. The orientation as well as direction of the helical segment in the lipid bilayer were analyzed by quenching experiments of the FITC and the ECz fluorescence. The results clearly indicated that the helical segment of the peptide penetrated into the lipid bilayer with vertical orientation in both the gel and liquid crystalline states of the lipid bilayer. Notably, the bulky N terminal was left behind in the outer aqueous phase of liposome, meaning that the C terminal of the peptide points to the inner aqueous phase of liposome. The insertion mode of the helical peptide into a bilayer membrane is therefore well-regulated in terms of the orientation and the directionality by designing the balance between the PEG chain and the helix length. The methodology presented here will initiate a way to construct artificial functional molecular systems that can induce vectorial transport phenomena as seen in biological systems.

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