Peptide-Membrane Interaction between Targeting and Lysis.
Katharina StutzAlex T MüllerJan A HissPetra SchneiderMarkus BlatterBernhard PfeifferGernot PosseltGil KanferBenoît KornmannPaul WredeKarl-Heinz AltmannSilja WesslerGisbert SchneiderPublished in: ACS chemical biology (2017)
Certain cationic peptides interact with biological membranes. These often-complex interactions can result in peptide targeting to the membrane, or in membrane permeation, rupture, and cell lysis. We investigated the relationship between the structural features of membrane-active peptides and these effects, to better understand these processes. To this end, we employed a computational method for morphing a membranolytic antimicrobial peptide into a nonmembranolytic mitochondrial targeting peptide by "directed simulated evolution." The results obtained demonstrate that superficially subtle sequence modifications can strongly affect the peptides' membranolytic and membrane-targeting abilities. Spectroscopic and computational analyses suggest that N- and C-terminal structural flexibility plays a crucial role in determining the mode of peptide-membrane interaction.