Web Release Date: January 6,
Structure, Topology, and Tilt of Cell-Signaling Peptides Containing Nuclear
Localization Sequences in Membrane Bilayers Determined by Solid-State NMR and
Molecular Dynamics Simulation Studies






and

Biophysics Research Division, Department of Chemistry, and Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1055
Received September 12, 2006
Revised Manuscript Received November 17, 2006

Abstract:
Cell-signaling peptides have been extensively used to transport functional molecules across
the plasma membrane into living cells. These peptides consist of a hydrophobic sequence and a cationic
nuclear localization sequence (NLS). It has been assumed that the hydrophobic region penetrates the
hydrophobic lipid bilayer and delivers the NLS inside the cell. To better understand the transport mechanism
of these peptides, in this study, we investigated the structure, orientation, tilt of the peptide relative to the
bilayer normal, and the membrane interaction of two cell-signaling peptides, SA and SKP. Results from
CD and solid-state NMR experiments combined with molecular dynamics simulations suggest that the
hydrophobic region is helical and has a transmembrane orientation with the helical axis tilted away from
the bilayer normal. The influence of the hydrophobic mismatch, between the hydrophobic length of the
peptide and the hydrophobic thickness of the bilayer, on the tilt angle of the peptides was investigated
using thicker POPC and thinner DMPC bilayers. NMR experiments showed that the hydrophobic domain
of each peptide has a tilt angle of 15 ± 3
in POPC, whereas in DMPC, 25 ± 3
and 30 ± 3
tilts were
observed for SA and SKP peptides, respectively. These results are in good agreement with molecular
dynamics simulations, which predict a tilt angle of 13.3
(SA in POPC), 16.4
(SKP in POPC), 22.3
(SA
in DMPC), and 31.7
(SKP in DMPC). These results and simulations on the hydrophobic fragment of SA
or SKP suggest that the tilt of helices increases with a decrease in bilayer thickness without changing the
phase, order, and structure of the lipid bilayers.
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