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How arginine derivatives alter the stability of lipid membranes: dissecting the roles of side chains, backbone and termini

Sarah F. Verbeek, Neha Awasthi, Nikolas K. Teiwes, Ingo Mey, Jochen S. Hub, Andreas Janshoff

2021European Biophysics Journal33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Arginine (R)-rich peptides constitute the most relevant class of cell-penetrating peptides and other membrane-active peptides that can translocate across the cell membrane or generate defects in lipid bilayers such as water-filled pores. The mode of action of R-rich peptides remains a topic of controversy, mainly because a quantitative and energetic understanding of arginine effects on membrane stability is lacking. Here, we explore the ability of several oligo-arginines R[Formula: see text] and of an arginine side chain mimic R[Formula: see text] to induce pore formation in lipid bilayers employing MD simulations, free-energy calculations, breakthrough force spectroscopy and leakage assays. Our experiments reveal that R[Formula: see text] but not R[Formula: see text] reduces the line tension of a membrane with anionic lipids. While R[Formula: see text] peptides form a layer on top of a partly negatively charged lipid bilayer, R[Formula: see text] leads to its disintegration. Complementary, our simulations show R[Formula: see text] causes membrane thinning and area per lipid increase beside lowering the pore nucleation free energy. Model polyarginine R[Formula: see text] similarly promoted pore formation in simulations, but without overall bilayer destabilization. We conclude that while the guanidine moiety is intrinsically membrane-disruptive, poly-arginines favor pore formation in negatively charged membranes via a different mechanism. Pore formation by R-rich peptides seems to be counteracted by lipids with PC headgroups. We found that long R[Formula: see text] and R[Formula: see text] but not short R[Formula: see text] reduce the free energy of nucleating a pore. In short R[Formula: see text], the substantial effect of the charged termini prevent their membrane activity, rationalizing why only longer [Formula: see text] are membrane-active.

Topics & Concepts

MembraneLipid bilayerChemistryBilayerSide chainBiophysicsCrystallographyMoietyArginineStereochemistryBiochemistryAmino acidOrganic chemistryBiologyPolymerRNA Interference and Gene DeliveryLipid Membrane Structure and BehaviorAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques