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Elsevier, Chemistry and Physics of Lipids, 1(165), p. 89-96

DOI: 10.1016/j.chemphyslip.2011.11.008

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Oligoarginine vectors for intracellular delivery: role of arginine side-chain orientation in chain length-dependent destabilization of lipid membranes.

Journal article published in 2012 by A. M. Bouchet, F. Lairion, Jean-Marie Ruysschaert, M. F. Lensink ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Arginine-rich peptides receive increased attention due to their capacity to cross different types of membranes and to transport cargo molecules inside cells. Even though peptide-induced destabilization has been investigated extensively, little is known about the peptide side-chain and backbone orientation with respect to the bilayer that may contribute to a molecular understanding of the peptide-induced membrane perturbations. The main objective of this work is to provide a detailed description of the orientation of arginine peptides in the lipid bilayer of PC and negatively charged PG liposomes using ATR-IR spectroscopy and molecular modeling, and to relate these orientational preferences to lipid bilayer destabilization. Molecular modeling showed that above the transition temperature arginine side-chains are preferentially solvent-directed at the PC/water interface whereas several arginine side-chains are pointing towards the PG hydrophobic core. IR dichroic spectra confirmed the orientation of the arginine side chains perpendicular to the lipid-water interface. IR spectra shows an randomly distributed backbone that seems essential to optimize interactions with the lipid membrane. The observed increase of permeation to a fluorescent dye is related to the peptide induced-formation of gauche bonds in the acyl chains. In the absence of hydrophobic residues, insertion of side-chains that favors phosphate/guanidium interaction is another mechanism of membrane permeabilization that has not been further analyzed so far. ; Journal Article ; info:eu-repo/semantics/published