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Biophysical Analysis to Assess the Interaction of CRAC and CARC Motif Peptides of Alpha Hemolysin of Escherichia coli with Membranes.
Biochemistry 2023 May 25
Alpha hemolysin of Escherichia coli (HlyA) is a pore-forming protein, which is a prototype of the " R epeat in T o x ins" (RTX) family. It was demonstrated that HlyA-cholesterol interaction facilitates the insertion of the toxin into membranes. Putative cholesterol-binding sites, called cholesterol recognition/amino acid consensus (CRAC), and CARC (analogous to CRAC but with the opposite orientation) were identified in the HlyA sequence. In this context, two peptides were synthesized, one derived from a CARC site from the insertion domain of the toxin (residues 341-353) (PEP 1) and the other one from a CRAC site from the domain between the acylated lysines (residues 639-644) (PEP 2), to study their role in the interaction of HlyA with membranes. The interaction of peptides with membranes of different lipid compositions (pure POPC and POPC/Cho of 4:1 and 2:1 molar ratios) was analyzed by surface plasmon resonance and molecular dynamics simulations. Results demonstrate that both peptides interact preferentially with Cho-containing membranes, although PEP 2 presents a lower K D than PEP 1. Molecular dynamics simulation results indicate that the insertion and interaction of PEP 2 with Cho-containing membranes are more prominent than those caused by PEP 1. The hemolytic activity of HlyA in the presence of peptides indicates that PEP 2 was the only one that inhibits HlyA activity, interfering in the binding between the toxin and cholesterol.
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