melitten and 3-hydroxyflavone

melitten has been researched along with 3-hydroxyflavone* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for melitten and 3-hydroxyflavone

ArticleYear
Dual-fluorescence L-amino acid reports insertion and orientation of melittin peptide in cell membranes.
    Bioconjugate chemistry, 2013, Dec-18, Volume: 24, Issue:12

    Monitoring insertion and orientation of peptides in situ on cell membranes remains a challenge. To this end, we synthesized an l-amino acid (AFaa) containing a dual-fluorescence dye of the 3-hydroxyflavone family, as a side chain. In contrast to other labeling approaches using a flexible linker, the AFaa fluorophore, introduced by solid phase synthesis into desired position of a peptide, is attached closely to its backbone with well-defined orientation, and, therefore, could reflect its localization in the membrane. This concept was validated by replacing the leucine-9 (L9) and tryptophan-19 (W19) residues by AFaa in melittin, a well-studied membrane-active peptide. Due to high sensitivity of AFaa dual emission to the environment polarity, we detected a much deeper insertion of L9 peptide position into the bilayer, compared to the W19 position. Moreover, using fluorescence microscopy with a polarized light excitation, we found different orientation of AFaa at L9 and W19 positions of melittin in the bilayers of giant vesicles and cellular membranes. These results suggested that in the natural membranes, similarly to the model lipid bilayers, melittin is preferentially oriented parallel to the membrane surface. The developed amino acid and the proposed methodology will be of interest to study other membrane peptides.

    Topics: Amino Acid Substitution; Amino Acids; Cell Membrane; Drug Design; Flavonoids; Fluorescent Dyes; Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions; Melitten; Models, Molecular; Protein Structure, Secondary

2013
Monitoring membrane binding and insertion of peptides by two-color fluorescent label.
    Biochimica et biophysica acta, 2011, Volume: 1808, Issue:1

    Herein, we developed an approach for monitoring membrane binding and insertion of peptides using a fluorescent environment-sensitive label of the 3-hydroxyflavone family. For this purpose, we labeled the N-terminus of three synthetic peptides, melittin, magainin 2 and poly-l-lysine capable to interact with lipid membranes. Binding of these peptides to lipid vesicles induced a strong fluorescence increase, which enabled to quantify the peptide-membrane interaction. Moreover, the dual emission of the label in these peptides correlated well with the depth of its insertion measured by the parallax quenching method. Thus, in melittin and magainin 2, which show deep insertion of their N-terminus, the label presented a dual emission corresponding to a low polar environment, while the environment of the poly-l-lysine N-terminus was rather polar, consistent with its location close to the bilayer surface. Using spectral deconvolution to distinguish the non-hydrated label species from the hydrated ones and two photon fluorescence microscopy to determine the probe orientation in giant vesicles, we found that the non-hydrated species were vertically oriented in the bilayer and constituted the best indicators for evaluating the depth of the peptide N-terminus in membranes. Thus, this label constitutes an interesting new tool for monitoring membrane binding and insertion of peptides.

    Topics: Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides; Biophysics; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Flavonoids; Fluorescent Dyes; Lipids; Magainins; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Melitten; Models, Statistical; Peptides; Polylysine; Protein Binding; Protein Structure, Tertiary; Spectrometry, Fluorescence; Spectrophotometry; Xenopus Proteins

2011