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Interaction of alpha-and beta-oligoarginine-acids and amides with anionic lipid vesicles: a mechanistic and thermodynamic study.

Hitz T, Iten R, Gardiner J, Namoto K, Walde P, Seebach D

Department of Materials, Institute of Polymers, ETH-Zürich, Wolfgang-Pauli-Strasse 10, CH-8093 Zürich, Switzerland.

The interaction of alpha- and beta-oligoarginine amides and acids and of alpha-polyarginine with anionic lipid vesicles was studied. The beta-oligoarginines used were beta3-homologues of the alpha-oligoarginines. Lipid bilayers were composed of POPC (1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) and POPG (1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-rac-(1-glycerol)]) containing 5 mol % pyrene-PG (1-hexadecanoyl-2-(1-pyrenedecanoyl)-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-rac-1-glycerol]). Kinetic analysis of the binding process onto large unilamellar POPC/POPG (3:7, molar ratio) vesicles (100 nm diameter) shows biphasic time courses for all tested peptides. The first binding step is fast and takes place within approximately 10 s with no disruption of the membrane as indicated by corresponding calcein release measurements. The second binding phase is slow and occurs within the next 30-300 s with substantial membrane disruption. In this context, beta-hexa- and octaarginine amides possess higher second half-times than the beta-hexa- and octaarginine acids of the same chain length. Furthermore beta-octaarginine amide induces a calcein release approximately twice as large as that of the beta-octaarginine acid. Thermodynamic analysis of the binding process, using the complex formation model that assumes that each peptide binds independently to n POPG lipids, reveals apparent binding constants (K(app1)) of approximately 5 x 10(6)-10(8) M(-1) and n-values from 3.7 for beta-hexaarginine acid up to 24.8 for alpha-polyarginine. Although the K(app1)-values are similar, the number of binding sites clearly depends on the chemical nature of the oligoarginine: beta-oligoarginine amides and alpha-oligoarginine acids interact with more lipids than beta-oligoarginine acids of the same length. Calculation of the electrostatic contribution to the total free energy of binding reveals that for all oligoarginines only 25-30% has electrostatic origin. The remaining approximately 70-75% is nonelectrostatic, corresponding to hydrogen bonding and/or hydrophobic interactions. From the obtained data, a mechanism is suggested by which oligoarginines interact with anionic vesicles: (1) initial electrostatic interaction that is fast, nonspecific, and relatively weak; (2) nonelectrostatic interaction that is rate-limiting, stronger, and induces bilayer rigidification as well as release of aqueous contents from the vesicles.

Published 3 May 2006 in Biochemistry, 45(18): 5817-29.
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