melitten has been researched along with 1-2-distearoyllecithin* in 5 studies
5 other study(ies) available for melitten and 1-2-distearoyllecithin
Article | Year |
---|---|
Targeting lipodisks enable selective delivery of anticancer peptides to tumor cells.
Issues concerning non-specificity, degradation and hemolysis severely hamper the development of membranolytic amphiphilic peptides into safe and efficient anticancer agents. To increase the therapeutic potential, we have previously developed a strategy based on formulation of the peptides in biocompatible nanosized lipodisks. Studies using melittin as model peptide show that the proteolytic degradation and hemolytic effect of the peptide are substantially reduced upon loading in lipodisks. Here, we explored the possibilities to increase the specificity and boost the cytotoxicity of melittin to tumor cells by use of targeting lipodisk. We demonstrate that small (~20 nm) EGF-targeted lipodisks can be produced and loaded with substantial amounts of peptide (lipid/peptide molar ratio >7) by means of a simple and straightforward preparation protocol. In vitro cell studies confirm specific binding of the peptide-loaded disks to tumor cells and suggest that cellular internalization of the disks results in a significantly improved cell-killing effect. Topics: Antineoplastic Agents; Cell Line, Tumor; Drug Carriers; Drug Delivery Systems; Humans; Melitten; Neoplasms; Phosphatidylcholines; Phosphatidylethanolamines; Polyethylene Glycols | 2017 |
Acyl chain length dependence in the stability of melittin-phosphatidylcholine complexes. A light scattering and 31P-NMR study.
Light scattering and 31P-NMR have been used to monitor the effect of the bee-toxin, melittin, on phosphatidylcholine (PC) bilayers of variable acyl chain length (from C16:0 to C20:0). Melittin interacts with all lipids provided the interaction is initiated in the lipid fluid phase. For low-to-moderate amounts of toxin (lipid-peptide molar ratios, Ri > or = 15), the system takes the form of large spheroidal vesicles, in the fluid phase, whose radius increases from 750 A with dipalmitoyl-PC (DPPC) to 1500 A with diarachinoyl-PC (DAPC). These vesicles fragment into small discoids of 100-150 A radius when the system is cooled down below Tc (the gel-to-fluid phase transition temperature). Little chain length dependence is observed for the small objects. Small structures are also detected independently of the physical state of lipids (gel or fluid) when Ri < or = 5 and provided the interaction has been made above Tc. Small discs clearly characterized for DPPC and distearoyl-PC (DSPC) lipids are much less stable with DAPC. However in the long term, all these small structures fuse into large lipid lamellae. Discs are thermodynamically unstable and kinetics of disappearance of the small lipid-toxin complexes increases as the chain length increases in the sense: DAPC >> DSPC > DPPC. Kinetics of fusion of the small discs into extended bilayers is described by a pseudo-first-order law involving a lag time after which fusion starts. Increasing the chain length decreases the lag time and increases the rate of fusion. Formation of both the large vesicles in the fluid phase and the small discs in the gel phase as well as their stability is discussed in terms of relative shapes and dynamics of both lipids and toxin. Topics: 1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine; Drug Stability; Kinetics; Light; Lipid Bilayers; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Melitten; Molecular Conformation; Phosphatidylcholines; Phosphorus; Scattering, Radiation; Structure-Activity Relationship; Thermodynamics | 1995 |
A region-matched hydrophobic interaction between melittin and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine in a ternary mixture of phosphatidylcholines.
Interaction of melittin with phosphatidylcholine molecules in pure vesicles, binary mixtures and a ternary mixture of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine IDMPC), dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and distearoylphosphatidylcholine (DSPC) was investigated by differential scanning calorimetry. Melittin binds preferentially with DMPC, and results in segregation of DMPC in binary mixtures of DMPC/DPPC and DMPC/DSPC and in a ternary mixture of DMPC/DPPC/DSPC. The results indicate that the hydrophobic part of peptide interacts preferentially with the phospholipid which has the same size of hydrophobic region or fatty acyl chains. Topics: 1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine; Bee Venoms; Calorimetry, Differential Scanning; Dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine; Lipid Bilayers; Melitten; Models, Biological; Phosphatidylcholines; Protein Binding | 1989 |
Perturbation of binary phospholipid mixtures by melittin: a fluorescence and raman spectroscopy study.
The effect of melittin on different binary mixtures of phospholipids has been studied by polarization of DPH fluorescence in order to determine if melittin can induce phase separation. Since the interaction between lipids and melittin is sensitive to both electrostatic and hydrophobic forces, we have studied the effect of the acyl chain length and of the polar head group of the lipids. In spite of the difference of the chain length between dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and distearoylphosphatidylcholine (DSPC), no phase separation occurs in an equimolar mixture of these lipids in presence of melittin. However, when the charged lipid dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) is mixed with either DPPC or DSPC, the addition of melittin leads to phase separation. The DSPC/DPPG/melittin system, which shows a very complex thermotropism, has also been studied by Raman spectroscopy using DPPG with deuteriated chains in order to monitor each lipid independently. The results suggest that the higher affinity of melittin for DPPG leads to a partial phase separation. We propose the formation of DPPG-rich domains perturbed by melittin and peptide-free regions enriched in DSPC triggered by the head group charge and chain-length differences. Topics: 1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine; Bee Venoms; Diphenylhexatriene; Fluorescence Polarization; Melitten; Phosphatidylcholines; Phosphatidylglycerols; Phospholipids; Spectrum Analysis, Raman; Temperature; Thermodynamics | 1989 |
Melittin-phospholipid interaction studied by employing the single tryptophan residue as an intrinsic fluorescent probe.
The rotational correlation time of melittin, obtained from the nanosecond anisotropy of the emission from its single tryptophan residue, has been found to increase considerably in phosphate solution relative to that in aqueous solution, consistent with protein aggregation. The steady-state fluorescence spectra as well as the absorption spectra in phosphate solution exhibit a very good degree of similarity with those of the protein bound to egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) and distearoylphosphatidylcholine (DSPC) bilayer liposomes. The value of the second-order rate constant for dynamic quenching, kq = 1.4.10(9) M-1.s-1, by acrylamide in 0.5 M phosphate solution is comparable to those for the protein-phospholipids complexes (1.10(9) and 0.7.10(9) M-1.s-1 for egg PC and DSPC, respectively). Similarities are also found in the nanosecond properties. There is a much stronger and quite similar dependence of the fluorescence spectra on time in the nanosecond range and of the fluorescence decay times on the emission wavelength in both cases as compared to the case is aqueous solution. These observations support the notion that melittin binds to the phospholipids in an aggregated form. The results suggest that the reduction in the kq values of bound melittin relative to that in aqueous solution and the blue shift of the fluorescence spectrum (from 352 to 337 nm) are brought about by shielding of the tryptophan residue from the solvent through a combination of protein aggregation and enhancement of its alpha-helical content (suggested by published CD data). The magnitude of the kq values for bound melittin, however, is still relatively high implying the occurrence of rather frequent encounters between the tryptophan residue and the hydrophilic acrylamide molecules. Thus, the residue is found not to penetrate deep into the phospholipid bilayer. Topics: Bee Venoms; Binding Sites; Kinetics; Melitten; Phosphatidylcholines; Protein Binding; Spectrometry, Fluorescence; Structure-Activity Relationship; Time Factors; Tryptophan | 1982 |