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Role of mitochondrial outer membrane in the uncoupling activity of N-terminally glutamate-substituted gramicidin A.

Of a series of gramicidin A (gA) derivatives, we have earlier found the peptide [Glu1]gA exhibiting very low toxicity toward mammalian cells, although dissipating mitochondrial membrane potential with almost the same efficiency as gA. Substitution of glutamate for valine at position 1 of the gA amino acid sequence, which is supposed to interfere with the formation of ion-conducting gA channels via head-to-head dimerization, reduces both channel-forming potency of the peptide in planar lipid bilayer membranes and its photonophoric activity in unilamellar liposomes. Here, we compared [Glu1]gA and gA abilities to cause depolarization of the inner mitochondrial membrane in mitochondria and mitoplasts, the latter lacking the outer mitochondrial membrane. Importantly, much less gA was needed to decrease the membrane potential in mitoplasts than in mitochondria, whereas the depolarizing potency of [Glu1]gA was nearly the same in these systems. Moreover, in multilamellar liposomes, [Glu1]gA exhibited more pronounced protonophoric activity than gA, in contrast to the data for unilamellar liposomes. These results allowed us to conclude that [Glu1]gA has a much higher permeability between adjacent lipid membranes than gA. Therefore, the fraction of peptide molecules, reaching the inner mitochondrial membrane upon the addition to cells, is much higher for [Glu1]gA compared to gА. Under these conditions, the decreased cytotoxicity of [Glu1]gA could be associated with its low efficiency as a channel-former dissipating potassium and sodium ion gradients across plasma membrane. The present study highlighted the role of the ability to permeate among various biological membranes for intracellular efficiency of ionophores.

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