melitten and monodansylcadaverine

melitten has been researched along with monodansylcadaverine* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for melitten and monodansylcadaverine

ArticleYear
Structural characterisation of the natural membrane-bound state of melittin: a fluorescence study of a dansylated analogue.
    Biochimica et biophysica acta, 1997, Oct-23, Volume: 1329, Issue:2

    The binding of a dansylated analogue of melittin (DNC-melittin) to natural membranes is described. The cytolytic peptide from honey bee venom melittin was enzymatically labelled in its glutamine-25 with the fluorescent probe monodansylcadaverine using guinea pig liver transglutaminase. The labelled peptide was characterised functionally in cytolytic assays, and spectroscopically by circular dichroism and fluorescence. The behaviour of DNC-melittin was, in all respects, indistinguishable from that of the naturally occurring peptide. We used resonance energy transfer to measure the state of aggregation of melittin on the membrane plane in synthetic and natural lipid bilayers. When bound to erythrocyte ghost membranes, the extent of energy transfer was found to be equivalent to when bound to small unilamellar vesicles of phosphatidylcholine. Our results correlate best with a proposed model in which the initial interaction between melittin and the red blood cells could be merely electrostatic and the peptide remains in a low alpha-helical conformation. The next step would be a peptide stabilisation in the membrane in a monomeric alpha-helical conformation that would imply the collapse of the membrane structure and liberation of the cell contents.

    Topics: Animals; Binding Sites; Cadaverine; Circular Dichroism; Energy Transfer; Fluorescent Dyes; Glutamine; Guinea Pigs; Hemolysis; Humans; Lipid Bilayers; Liver; Melitten; Protein Binding; Protein Conformation; Spectrometry, Fluorescence; Transglutaminases

1997
Selective labelling of melittin with a fluorescent dansylcadaverine probe using guinea-pig liver transglutaminase.
    FEBS letters, 1991, Jan-14, Volume: 278, Issue:1

    Melittin, a C-terminal glutamine peptide, incorporated the fluorescent probe monodansylcadaverine (DNC) when catalysed by guinea-pig liver transglutaminase and Ca2+, as determined by thin-layer chromatography (TLC) and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). A 1:1 adduct DNC-melittin was identified in which a single glutamine residue out of two, i.e. Gln25, acts as acyl donor. Incubation of melittin with transglutaminase in the absence of DNC originated high molecular mass complexes indicative that the peptide lysine residue can act as an acyl acceptor. The DNC-melittin was about 3 times more active in the lysis of red cell membranes than native melittin. Fluorescence study of the labelled melittin in the submicromolar range where it is active on cells showed that while totally exposed to solvent in methanol solution, both Trp and dansyl groups are buried in buffer solution. This strongly suggests that DNC-melittin is self-associated and indeed more active than the native melittin in the same conditions.

    Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Cadaverine; Calcium; Catalysis; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Chromatography, Thin Layer; Fluorescent Dyes; Guinea Pigs; Hemolysis; Humans; Liver; Melitten; Molecular Sequence Data; Transglutaminases

1991