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1.
Biophys J ; 100(1): 108-16, 2011 Jan 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21190662

ABSTRACT

The airspaces are lined with a dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC)-rich film called pulmonary surfactant, which is named for its ability to maintain normal respiratory mechanics by reducing surface tension at the air-liquid interface. Inhaled airborne particles containing bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) may incorporate into the surfactant monolayer. In this study, we evaluated the effect of smooth LPS (S-LPS), containing the entire core oligosaccharide region and the O-antigen, on the biophysical properties of lung surfactant-like films composed of either DPPC or DPPC/palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylglycerol (POPG)/palmitic acid (PA) (28:9:5.6, w/w/w). Our results show that low amounts of S-LPS fluidized DPPC monolayers, as demonstrated by fluorescence microscopy and changes in the compressibility modulus. This promoted early collapse and prevented the attainment of high surface pressures. These destabilizing effects could not be relieved by repeated compression-expansion cycles. Similar effects were observed with surfactant-like films composed of DPPC/POPG/PA. On the other hand, the interaction of SP-A, a surfactant membrane-associated alveolar protein that also binds to LPS, with surfactant-like films containing S-LPS increased monolayer destabilization due to the extraction of lipid molecules from the monolayer, leading to the dissolution of monolayer material in the aqueous subphase. This suggests that SP-A may act as an LPS scavenger.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli/chemistry , Lipopolysaccharides/pharmacology , Pulmonary Surfactants/metabolism , 1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/metabolism , Elastic Modulus/drug effects , Escherichia coli/drug effects , Fluorescence , Humans , Kinetics , Lipopolysaccharides/chemistry , Palmitic Acid/metabolism , Phosphatidylglycerols/metabolism , Pressure , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein A/metabolism , Temperature
2.
Biophys J ; 95(7): 3287-94, 2008 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18599636

ABSTRACT

Surfactant protein A (SP-A) is known to cause bacterial permeabilization. The aim of this work was to gain insight into the mechanism by which SP-A induces permeabilization of rough lipopolysaccharide (Re-LPS) membranes. In the presence of calcium, large interconnected aggregates of fluorescently labeled TR-SP-A were observed on the surface of Re-LPS films by epifluorescence microscopy. Using Re-LPS monolayer relaxation experiments at constant surface pressure, we demonstrated that SP-A induced Re-LPS molecular loss by promoting the formation of three-dimensional lipid-protein aggregates in Re-LPS membranes. This resulted in decreased van der Waals interactions between Re-LPS acyl chains, as determined by differential scanning calorimetry, which rendered the membrane leaky. We also showed that the coexistence of gel and fluid lipid phases within the Re-LPS membrane conferred susceptibility to SP-A-mediated permeabilization. Taken together, our results seem to indicate that the calcium-dependent permeabilization of Re-LPS membranes by SP-A is related to the extraction of LPS molecules from the membrane due to the formation of calcium-mediated protein aggregates that contain LPS.


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane Permeability/drug effects , Cell Membrane/drug effects , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Lipopolysaccharides/isolation & purification , Lipopolysaccharides/metabolism , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein A/metabolism , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein A/pharmacology , Calcium/pharmacology , Gram-Negative Bacteria/cytology , Gram-Negative Bacteria/drug effects , Gram-Negative Bacteria/metabolism , Humans , Lipid Bilayers/metabolism , Protein Binding/drug effects , Surface Properties , Water/metabolism
3.
Biochemistry ; 46(39): 11047-56, 2007 Oct 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17845058

ABSTRACT

Surfactant protein B (SP-B) is essential for normal lung surfactant function, which is in itself essential to life. However, the molecular basis for SP-B's activity is not understood and a high-resolution structure for SP-B has not been determined. Mini-B is a 34-residue peptide with internal disulfide linkages that is composed of the N- and C-terminal helical regions of SP-B. It has been shown to retain similar activity to full-length SP-B in certain in vitro and in vivo studies. We have used solution NMR to determine the structure of Mini-B in the presence of micelles composed of the anionic detergent sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). Under these conditions, Mini-B forms two alpha-helices connected by an unstructured loop. Mini-B possesses a strikingly amphipathic surface with a large positively charged patch on one face of the peptide and a large hydrophobic patch on the opposite face. A tryptophan side chain extends outward from the peptide in a position to interact with lipids at the polar/apolar interface. Interhelix interactions are stabilized by both disulfide bonds and by interleaving of hydrophobic side chains from the two helices.


Subject(s)
Detergents/chemistry , Micelles , Peptide Fragments/chemistry , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein B/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Models, Biological , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Peptide Fragments/chemical synthesis , Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate/chemistry
4.
Biophys J ; 93(10): 3529-40, 2007 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17693477

ABSTRACT

Due to the inhalation of airborne particles containing bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), these molecules might incorporate into the 1,2-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC)-rich monolayer and interact with surfactant protein A (SP-A), the major surfactant protein component involved in host defense. In this study, epifluorescence microscopy combined with a surface balance was used to examine the interaction of SP-A with mixed monolayers of DPPC/rough LPS (Re-LPS). Binary monolayers of Re-LPS plus DPPC showed negative deviations from ideal behavior of the mean areas in the films consistent with partial miscibility and attractive interaction between the lipids. This interaction resulted in rearrangement and reduction of the size of DPPC-rich solid domains in DPPC/Re-LPS monolayers. The adsorption of SP-A to these monolayers caused expansion in the lipid molecular areas. SP-A interacted strongly with Re-LPS and promoted the formation of DPPC-rich solid domains. Fluorescently labeled Texas red-SP-A accumulated at the fluid-solid boundary regions and formed networks of interconnected filaments in the fluid phase of DPPC/Re-LPS monolayers in a Ca(2+)-independent manner. These lattice-like structures were also observed when TR-SP-A interacted with lipid A monolayers. These novel results deepen our understanding of the specific interaction of SP-A with the lipid A moiety of bacterial LPS.


Subject(s)
1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/chemistry , Biophysics/methods , Lipopolysaccharides/chemistry , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein A/chemistry , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein A/physiology , Adsorption , Calcium/chemistry , Lipids/chemistry , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Models, Chemical , Molecular Conformation , Pressure , Protein Binding , Surface Properties
5.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1768(9): 2060-9, 2007 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17678872

ABSTRACT

Surfactant protein A (SP-A), the most abundant protein in the lung alveolar surface, has multiple activities, including surfactant-related functions. SP-A is required for the formation of tubular myelin and the lung surface film. The human SP-A locus consists of two functional SP-A genes, SP-A1 and SP-A2, with a number of alleles characterized for each gene. We have found that the human in vitro expressed variants, SP-A1 (6A(2)) and SP-A2 (1A(0)), and the coexpressed SP-A1/SP-A2 (6A(2)/1A(0)) protein have a differential influence on the organization of phospholipid monolayers containing surfactant protein B (SP-B). Lipid films containing SP-B and SP-A2 (1A(0)) showed surface features similar to those observed in lipid films with SP-B and native human SP-A. Fluorescence images revealed the presence of characteristic fluorescent probe-excluding clusters coexisting with the traditional lipid liquid-expanded and liquid-condensed phase. Images of the films containing SP-B and SP-A1 (6A(2)) showed different distribution of the proteins. The morphology of lipid films containing SP-B and the coexpressed SP-A1/SP-A2 (6A(2)/1A(0)) combined features of the individual films containing the SP-A1 or SP-A2 variant. The results indicate that human SP-A1 and SP-A2 variants exhibit differential effects on characteristics of phospholipid monolayers containing SP-B. This may differentially impact surface film activity.


Subject(s)
Lipid Bilayers/chemistry , Membrane Fluidity , Phospholipids/chemistry , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein A/chemistry , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein A/ultrastructure , Animals , Humans , Phase Transition , Protein Isoforms/chemistry , Protein Isoforms/ultrastructure , Species Specificity , Surface Tension , Swine
6.
Biophys J ; 93(1): 164-75, 2007 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17434940

ABSTRACT

Deuterium nuclear magnetic resonance was used to monitor lipid acyl-chain orientational order in suspensions of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) containing Ca(2+) and the lung surfactant proteins SP-A and SP-B separately and together. To distinguish between protein-lipid interactions involving the PC and PG lipid headgroups and to examine whether such interactions might influence spatial distribution of lipids within the bilayer, acyl chains on either the DPPC or the DPPG component of the mixture were deuterated. The lipid components of the resulting mixtures were thus either DPPC-d(62)/DPPG (7:3) or DPPC/DPPG-d(62) (7:3), respectively. SP-A had little effect on DPPC-d(62) chain order but did narrow the temperature range over which DPPG-d(62) ordered at the liquid-crystal-to-gel transition. No segregation of lipid components was seen for temperatures above or below the transition. Near the transition, though, there was evidence that SP-A promoted preferential depletion of DPPG from liquid crystalline domains in the temperature range over which gel and liquid crystal domains coexist. SP-B lowered average chain order of both lipids both above and below the main transition. The perturbations of chain order by SP-A and SP-B together were smaller than by SP-B alone. This reduction in perturbation of the lipids by the additional presence of SP-A likely indicated a strong interaction between SP-A and SP-B. The competitive lipid-lipid, lipid-protein, and protein-protein interactions suggested by these observations presumably facilitate the reorganization of surfactant material inherent in the transformation from lamellar bodies to a functional surfactant layer.


Subject(s)
1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/chemistry , Phosphatidylglycerols/chemistry , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein A/chemistry , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein B/chemistry , Phase Transition , Protein Binding
7.
Chem Phys Lipids ; 144(2): 137-45, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17055468

ABSTRACT

Lung surfactant (LS) is an extra-cellular lipid-protein system responsible for maintaining low surface tension in the lung and alveolar stability. Serum proteins cause dysfunction of this material, e.g. in adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). BLES is a clinically used LS consisting of most of the lipids and associated proteins from bovine lung lavage. Aqueous phases of BLES at 30% and 70% hydration, with and without 5% by weight of bovine serum albumin (BSA), calculated on the amount of lipids, were studied using X-ray diffraction during cooling from 42 to 5 degrees C. The diffraction curves are consistent with a transition from a lamellar liquid crystalline phase to a gel phase transition at cooling in the interval 30-20 degrees C. The long-spacings correspond to a reduction of the bilayer thickness during this transition. The wide-angle region shows a peak at 4.1 A below 25 degrees C, which is characteristic of the hexagonal chain packing of the gel phase. The perturbation of the bilayers by the presence of BSA seems to induce a significant decrease of the bilayer thickness. Calculations on the observed limits of swelling (taking place in the range 50-60%) indicate that BSA is closely associated with the BLES bilayers, probably due to electrostatic interaction with the cationic surfactant proteins SP-B and SP-C. This study show that the LS lipid structural organizations are extremely susceptible to small amounts of serum albumin, which may have implications in surfactant related lung disease and clinical applications of surfactant therapy.


Subject(s)
Pulmonary Surfactants/chemistry , Serum Albumin, Bovine/chemistry , Animals , Cattle , Molecular Structure , Serum Albumin, Bovine/pharmacology , X-Ray Diffraction
8.
Biophys J ; 90(10): 3632-42, 2006 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16500977

ABSTRACT

Lung surfactant (LS), a lipid-protein mixture, forms films at the lung air-water interface and prevents alveolar collapse at end expiration. In lung disease and injury, the surface activity of LS is inhibited by leakage of serum proteins such as albumin into the alveolar hypophase. Multilamellar vesicular dispersions of a clinically used replacement, bovine lipid extract surfactant (BLES), to which (2% by weight) chain-perdeuterated dipalmitoylphosphatidycholine (DPPG mixtures-d(62)) had been added, were studied using deuterium-NMR spectroscopy ((2)H-NMR) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). DSC scans of BLES showed a broad gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition between 10-35 degrees C, with a temperature of maximum heat flow (T(max)) around 27 degrees C. Incorporation of the DPPC-d(62) into BLES-reconstituted vesicles did not alter the T(max) or the transition range as observed by DSC or the hydrocarbon stretching modes of the lipids observed using infrared spectroscopy. Transition enthalpy change and (2)H-NMR order parameter profiles were not significantly altered by addition of calcium and cholesterol to BLES. (2)H-NMR spectra of the DPPC-d(62) probes in these samples were characteristic of a single average lipid environment at all temperatures. This suggested either continuous ordering of the bilayer through the transition during cooling or averaging of the DPPC-d(62) environment by rapid diffusion between small domains on a short timescale relative to that characteristic of the (2)H-NMR experiment. Addition of 10% by weight of soluble bovine serum albumin (1:0.1, BLES/albumin, dry wt/wt) broadened the transition slightly and resulted in the superposition of (2)H-NMR spectral features characteristic of coexisting fluid and ordered phases. This suggests the persistence of phase-separated domains throughout the transition regime (5-35 degrees C) of BLES with albumin. The study suggests albumin can cause segregation of protein bound-lipid domains in surfactant at NMR timescales (10(-5) s). Persistent phase separation at physiological temperature may provide for a basis for loss of surface activity of surfactant in dysfunction and disease.


Subject(s)
Pulmonary Surfactants/chemistry , Pulmonary Surfactants/isolation & purification , Serum Albumin, Bovine/analysis , Serum Albumin, Bovine/chemistry , Animals , Calorimetry, Differential Scanning , Cattle , Deuterium , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Molecular Conformation , Phase Transition , Tissue Extracts/chemistry , Tissue Extracts/isolation & purification
9.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1713(2): 118-28, 2005 Jul 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16002041

ABSTRACT

Pulmonary surfactant protein SP-C is a 35-residue polypeptide composed of a hydrophobic transmembrane alpha-helix and a polycationic, palmitoylated-cysteine containing N-terminal segment. This segment is likely the only structural motif the protein projects out of the bilayer in which SP-C is inserted and is therefore a candidate motif to participate in interactions with other bilayers or monolayers. In the present work, we have detected intrinsic ability of a peptide based on the sequence of the N-terminal segment of SP-C to interact and insert spontaneously into preformed zwitterionic or anionic phospholipid monolayers. The peptide expands the pi-A compression isotherms of interfacial phospholipid/peptide films, and perturbs the lipid packing of phospholipid films during compression-driven liquid-expanded to liquid-condensed lateral transitions, as observed by epifluorescence microscopy. These results demonstrate that the sequence of the SP-C N-terminal region has intrinsic ability to interact with, insert into, and perturb the structure of zwitterionic and anionic phospholipid films, even in the absence of the palmitic chains attached to this segment in the native protein. This effect has been related with the ability of SP-C to facilitate reinsertion of surface active lipid molecules into the lung interface during respiratory compression-expansion cycling.


Subject(s)
Phospholipids/chemistry , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein C/chemistry , Adsorption , Amino Acid Motifs , Animals , Biophysical Phenomena , Biophysics , Cations , Cysteine/chemistry , Ions , Kinetics , Lipids/chemistry , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Palmitic Acids/chemistry , Peptides/chemistry , Pressure , Protein Binding , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein C/metabolism , Surface Properties , Swine , Time Factors
10.
Biochemistry ; 43(48): 15187-94, 2004 Dec 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15568810

ABSTRACT

Although the membrane-associated surfactant protein B (SP-B) is an essential component of lung surfactant, which is itself essential for life, the molecular basis for its activity is not understood. SP-B's biophysical functions can be partially mimicked by subfragments of the protein, including the C-terminus. We have used NMR to determine the structure of a C-terminal fragment of human SP-B that includes residues 63-78. Structure determination was performed both in the fluorinated alcohol hexafluoro-2-propanol (HFIP) and in sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles. In both solvents, residues 68-78 take on an amphipathic helical structure, in agreement with predictions made by comparison to homologous saposin family proteins. In HFIP, the five N-terminal residues of the peptide are largely unstructured, while in SDS micelles, these residues take on a well-defined compact conformation. Differences in helical residue side chain positioning between the two solvents were also found, with better agreement between the structures for the hydrophobic face than the hydrophilic face. A paramagnetic probe was used to investigate the position of the peptide within the SDS micelles and indicated that the peptide is located at the water interface with the hydrophobic face of the helix oriented inward, the hydrophilic face of the helix oriented outward, and the N-terminal residues even farther from the micelle center than those on the hydrophilic face of the alpha-helix. Interactions of basic residues of SP-B with anionic lipid headgroups are known to have an impact on function, and these studies demonstrate structural ramifications of such interactions via the differences observed between the peptide structures determined in HFIP and SDS.


Subject(s)
Detergents , Micelles , Peptide Fragments/chemistry , Propanols/chemistry , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein B/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Cyclic N-Oxides/chemistry , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , Nitrogen Isotopes/metabolism , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Peptide Fragments/chemical synthesis , Protein Conformation , Protein Structure, Secondary , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein B/chemical synthesis , Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate/chemistry
11.
Eur Biophys J ; 33(4): 285-90, 2004 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14504839

ABSTRACT

Deuterium ((2)H) NMR has been used to observe perturbation of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) bilayers by the pulmonary surfactant protein B (SP-B) at concentrations up to 17% (w/w). Previous (2)H NMR studies of DPPC/dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) (7:3) bilayers containing up to 11% (w/w) SP-B and DPPC bilayers containing up to 11% (w/w) synthetic SP-B indicated a slight effect on bilayer chain order and a more substantial effect on motions that contribute to decay of quadrupole echoes obtained from bilayers of deuterated DPPC. This is consistent with the perturbation of headgroup-deuterated DPPC reported here for bilayers containing 6 and 9% (w/w) SP-B. For the higher concentrations of SP-B investigated in the present work, (2)H NMR spectra of DPPC deuterated in both the headgroup and chain display a prominent narrow component consistent with fast, large amplitude reorientation of some labeled lipid. Similar spectral perturbations have been reported for bilayers in the presence of the antibiotic polypeptide nisin. The observation of large amplitude lipid reorientation at high SP-B concentration could indicate that SP-B can induce regions of high bilayer curvature and thus provides some insight into local interaction of SP-B with DPPC. Such local interactions may be relevant to the formation, in vitro and in vivo, of tubular myelin, a unique structure found in extracellular pulmonary surfactant, and to the delivery of surfactant material to films at the air-water interface.


Subject(s)
1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/chemistry , Lipid Bilayers/chemistry , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/methods , Membrane Fluidity , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein B/chemistry , Deuterium , Membranes, Artificial , Molecular Conformation , Temperature
12.
Biochem J ; 377(Pt 1): 183-93, 2004 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14514353

ABSTRACT

In the present study, 13-residue peptides with sequences corresponding to the native N-terminal segment of pulmonary SP-C (surfactant protein C) have been synthesized and their interaction with phospholipid bilayers characterized. The peptides are soluble in aqueous media but associate spontaneously with bilayers composed of either zwitterionic (phosphatidylcholine) or anionic (phosphatidylglycerol) phospholipids. The peptides show higher affinity for anionic than for zwitterionic membranes. Interaction of the peptides with both zwitterionic and anionic membranes promotes phospholipid vesicle aggregation, and leakage of the aqueous content of the vesicles. The lipid-peptide interaction includes a significant hydrophobic component for both zwitterionic and anionic membranes, although the interaction with phosphatidylglycerol bilayers is also electrostatic in nature. The effects of the SP-C N-terminal peptides on the membrane structure are mediated by significant perturbations of the packing order and mobility of phospholipid acyl chain segments deep in the bilayer, as detected by differential scanning calorimetry and spin-label ESR. These results suggest that the N-terminal region of SP-C, even in the absence of acylation, possesses an intrinsic propensity to interact with and perturb phospholipid bilayers, thereby potentially facilitating SP-C promoting bilayer-monolayer transitions at the alveolar spaces.


Subject(s)
Lipid Bilayers/chemistry , Lipid Bilayers/metabolism , Phospholipids/chemistry , Phospholipids/metabolism , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein C/chemistry , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein C/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Binding Sites , Calorimetry, Differential Scanning , Cell Membrane Permeability , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Peptides/chemistry , Peptides/metabolism , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Tryptophan/chemistry
13.
Biophys J ; 85(4): 2397-405, 2003 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14507703

ABSTRACT

In the mixture of lipids and proteins which comprise pulmonary surfactant, the dominant protein by mass is surfactant protein A (SP-A), a hydrophilic glycoprotein. SP-A forms octadecamers that interact with phospholipid bilayer surfaces in the presence of calcium. Deuterium NMR was used to characterize the perturbation by SP-A, in the presence of 5 mM Ca(2+), of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) properties in DPPC/egg-PG (7:3) bilayers. Effects of SP-A were uniformly distributed over the observed DPPC population. SP-A reduced DPPC chain orientational order significantly in the gel phase but only slightly in the liquid-crystalline phase. Quadrupole echo decay times for DPPC chain deuterons were sensitive to SP-A in the liquid-crystalline mixture but not in the gel phase. SP-A reduced quadrupole splittings of DPPC choline beta-deuterons but had little effect on choline alpha-deuteron splittings. The observed effects of SP-A on DPPC/egg-PG bilayer properties differ from those of the hydrophobic surfactant proteins SP-B and SP-C. This is consistent with the expectation that SP-A interacts primarily at bilayer surfaces.


Subject(s)
1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/chemistry , Lipid Bilayers/chemistry , Membrane Fluidity , Phosphatidylglycerols/chemistry , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein A/chemistry , Binding Sites , Eggs , Macromolecular Substances , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Membranes, Artificial , Molecular Conformation , Protein Binding , Temperature
14.
Biophys J ; 85(1): 340-9, 2003 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12829488

ABSTRACT

Pulmonary surfactant, a lipid/protein complex that lines the air/water interface in the mammalian lung, functions to reduce the work of breathing. Surfactant protein B (SP-B) is a small, hydrophobic protein that is an essential component of this mixture. Structure-function relationships of SP-B are currently under investigation as the protein and its peptide analogs are being incorporated into surfactant replacement therapies. Knowledge of the structure of SP-B and its related peptides in bulk and monolayer phases will facilitate the design of later generation therapeutic agents. Prior infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopic studies reported notable, reversible surface pressure-induced antiparallel beta-sheet formation in a synthetic peptide derived from human SP-B, residues 9-36 (SP-B(9-36)). In the current work, infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy is applied in conjunction with isotopic labeling to detect the site and pressure dependence of the conformational change. SP-B(9-36), synthesized with (13)C=O-labeled Ala residues in positions 26, 28, 30, and 32, shifted the beta-sheet marker band to approximately 1600 cm(-1) and thus immediately identified this structural element within the labeled region. Surface pressure-induced alterations in the relative intensities of Amide I band constituents are interpreted using a semiempirical transition dipole coupling model. In addition, electron micrographs reveal the formation of tubular myelin structures from in vitro preparations using SP-B(9-36) in place of porcine SP-B indicating that the peptide has the potential to mimic this property of the native protein.


Subject(s)
Biological Products/chemistry , Crystallography/methods , Models, Molecular , Proteins/chemistry , Proteins/ultrastructure , Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein B/chemistry , Pulmonary Surfactants/chemistry , Spectrophotometry, Infrared/methods , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Computer Simulation , Humans , Isotope Labeling , Molecular Sequence Data , Myelin Sheath , Phase Transition , Protein Conformation , Rats , Species Specificity , Structure-Activity Relationship , Surface Tension , Swine, Miniature
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