Issue 16, 2008

Anion transport properties of amine and amide-sidechained peptides are affected by charge and phospholipid composition

Abstract

Four synthetic anion transporters (SATs) having the general formula (n-C18H37)2N-COCH2OCH2CO-(Gly)3Pro-Lys(ε-N-R)-(Gly)2-O-n-C7H15 were prepared and studied. The group R was Cbz, H (TFA salt), t-Boc, and dansyl in peptides 1, 2, 3, and 4 respectively. The glutamine analog (GGGPQAG sequence) was also included. A dansyl-substituted fluorescent SAT was used to probe peptide insertion; the dansyl sidechain resides in an environment near the bilayer's midpolar regime. When the lysine sidechain was free or protected amine, little effect was noted on final Cl transport rate in DOPC : DOPA (7 : 3) liposomes. This stands in contrast to the significant retardation of transport previously observed when a negative glutamate residue was present in the peptide sequence. It was also found that Cl release from liposomes depended on the phospholipid composition of the vesicles. Chloride transport diminished significantly for the free lysine containing SAT, 2, when the lipid was altered from DOPC : DOPA to pure DOPC. Amide-sidechained SATs 1 and 5 showed a relatively small decrease in Cl transport. The effect of lipid composition on Cl transport was explained by differences in electrostatic interaction between amino acid sidechain and lipid headgroup, which was modeled by computation.

Graphical abstract: Anion transport properties of amine and amide-sidechained peptides are affected by charge and phospholipid composition

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 Jan 2008
Accepted
16 Apr 2008
First published
16 Jun 2008

Org. Biomol. Chem., 2008,6, 2914-2923

Anion transport properties of amine and amide-sidechained peptides are affected by charge and phospholipid composition

L. You, R. Li and G. W. Gokel, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2008, 6, 2914 DOI: 10.1039/B800530C

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