Arginine in α-defensins: Differential effects on bactericidal activity correspond to geometry of membrane curvature generation and peptide-lipid phase behavior
Source
Journal of Biological Chemistry
ISSN
00219258
Date Issued
2012-06-22
Author(s)
Schmidt, Nathan W.
Tai, Kenneth P.
Kamdar, Karishma
Lai, Ghee Hwee
Zhao, Kun
Ouellette, André J.
Wong, Gerard C.L.
Abstract
The conserved tridisulfide array of the α-defensin family imposes a common triple-stranded β-sheet topology on peptides that may have highly diverse primary structures, resulting in differential outcomes after targeted mutagenesis. In mouse cryptdin-4 (Crp4) and rhesus myeloid α-defensin-4 (RMAD4), complete substitutions of Arg with Lys affect bactericidal peptide activity very differently. Lys-for-Arg mutagenesis attenuates Crp4, but RMAD4 activity remains mostly unchanged. Here, we show that the differential biological effect of Lys-for- Arg replacements can be understood by the distinct phase behavior of the experimental peptide-lipid system. In Crp4, small-angle x-ray scattering analyses showed that Arg-to-Lys replacements shifted the induced nanoporous phases to a different range of lipid compositions compared with the Arg-rich native peptide, consistent with the attenuation of bactericidal activity by Lys-for-Arg mutations. In contrast, such phases generated by RMAD4 were largely unchanged. The concordance between small-angle x-ray scattering measurements and biological activity provides evidence that specific types of α-defensin-induced membrane curvature-generating tendencies correspond directly to bactericidal activity via membrane destabilization. © 2012 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
