Coordination of Redox Ions within a Membrane-Binding Peptide: A Tale of Aromatic Rings.
Riqiang FuMary T RooneyRongfu ZhangMyriam L CottenPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2021)
The amino-terminal-copper-and-nickel-binding (ATCUN) motif, a tripeptide sequence ending with a histidine, confers important functions to proteins and peptides. Few high-resolution studies have been performed on the ATCUN motifs of membrane-associated proteins and peptides, limiting our understanding of how they stabilize Cu2+/Ni2+ in membranes. Here, we leverage solid-state NMR to investigate metal-binding to piscidin-1 (P1), a host-defense peptide featuring F1F2H3 as its ATCUN motif. Bound to redox ions, P1 chemically and physically damages pathogenic cell membranes. We design 13C/15N correlation experiments to detect and assign the deprotonated nitrogens produced and/or shifted by Ni2+-binding. Occupying multiple chemical states in P1-apo, H3 and the neighboring H4 respond to metalation by populating only the τ-tautomer. H3, as a proximal histidine, directly coordinates the metal, compared to the distal H4. Density functional theory calculations reflect this noncanonical arrangement and point toward cation-π interactions between the F1/F2/H4 aromatic rings and metal. These structural findings, which are relevant to other ATCUN-containing membrane peptides, could help design new therapeutics and materials for use in the areas of drug-resistant bacteria, neurological disorders, and biomedical imaging.
Keyphrases
- density functional theory
- drug resistant
- high resolution
- solid state
- amino acid
- molecular dynamics
- multidrug resistant
- metal organic framework
- acinetobacter baumannii
- dna binding
- aqueous solution
- quantum dots
- binding protein
- single cell
- small molecule
- magnetic resonance
- cell therapy
- cystic fibrosis
- stem cells
- high speed
- molecular dynamics simulations
- photodynamic therapy
- ionic liquid
- tandem mass spectrometry
- gold nanoparticles
- bone marrow
- carbon nanotubes