4.4 Article

Three-dimensional structure in lipid micelles of the pediocin-like antimicrobial peptide curvacin A

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 44, Issue 49, Pages 16149-16157

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi051215u

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The 3D structure of the membrane-permeabilizing 41-mer pediocin-like antimicrobial peptide curvacin A produced by lactic acid bacteria has been studied by NMR spectroscopy. In DPC micelles, the cationic and hydrophilic N-terminal half of the peptide forms an S-shaped beta-sheet-like domain stabilized by a disulfide bridge and a few hydrogen bonds. This domain is followed by two alpha-helices: a hydrophilic 6-mer helix between residues 19 and 24 and an amphiphilic/hydrophobic 11-mer helix between residues 29 and 39. There are two hinges in the pepticle, one at residues 16-18 between the N-terminal S-shaped beta-sheet-like structure and the central 6-mer helix and one at residues 26-28 between the central helix and the 11-met C-terminal helix. The latter helix is the only amphiphilic/hydrophobic part of the pepticle and is thus presumably the part that penetrates into the hydrophobic phase of target-cell membranes. The hinae between the two helices may introduce the flexibility that allows the helix to dip into membranes. The helix-hinge-helix structure in the C-terminal half of curvacin A clearly distinguishes this peptide from the other pediocin-like peptides whose structures have been analyzed and suggests that curvacin A along with the structural homologues enterocin P and carnobacteriocin BM1 belong to a subgroup of the pediocin-like family of antimicrobial peptides.

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