Fluorometric evaluation of the affinities of isoprenylated peptides for lipid bilayers

JR Silvius, F l'Heureux - Biochemistry, 1994 - ACS Publications
JR Silvius, F l'Heureux
Biochemistry, 1994ACS Publications
Revised Manuscript Received December 2, 19939 abstract: A fluorescence-enhancement
assayhas been used to monitor the association of a series of fluorescent isoprenylated di-to
tetrapeptides, whosesequences representthe carboxyltermini of several isoprenylated
proteins (Ki-/u?, ral 1, rae 2, and rho C), with phospholipid vesicles. These lipopeptides,
containing mainly hydrophilic amino acidresidues, all rapidly equilibrate (in seconds or
faster) between the aqueous phase and the outer surfaces of lipid vesicles, in a manner that …
Revised Manuscript Received December 2, 19939 abstract: A fluorescence-enhancement assayhas been used to monitor the association of a series of fluorescent isoprenylated di-to tetrapeptides, whosesequences representthe carboxyltermini of several isoprenylated proteins (Ki-/u?, ral 1, rae 2, and rho C), with phospholipid vesicles. These lipopeptides, containing mainly hydrophilic amino acidresidues, all rapidly equilibrate (in seconds or faster) between the aqueous phase and the outer surfaces of lipid vesicles, in a manner that is well-modeled as a simple two-phase partitioning equilibrium. Farnesylated or geranylgeranylated peptides with methylated C-terminal cysteine residues exhibit half-maximal binding to 9: 1 phosphatidylcholine (PC)/phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) vesicles at lipid concentrations on the order of 5-40 µ or 200-800 nM, respectively. Removal of the methyl group from the carboxyl-terminal cysteine residue decreases the affinity of a given lipopeptide for neutral (PC/PE) vesicles by 10-to 20-fold and the affinity for vesicles with a physiological surface charge by 40-fold or more. Cysteine-linked farnesyl and geranylgeranyl residues are found to be equivalent to cysteine-linked n-alkyl chains of roughly 11 and 14 carbons, respectively, in the strength of their interactions with lipid bilayers. Variations in vesicle lipid composition (cholesterol or aminophospholipid content) only modestly alter the affinity of isoprenylated peptides for the lipid bilayer. Our data suggest that a C-terminal geranylgeranylcysteine or O-methylated farnesylcysteine residue can by itself confer efficient (but rapidly reversible) membrane binding to proteins bearing these modifications, while an unmethylated C-terminal farnesylcysteine residue by itself would be only marginally efficient as a membrane ‘anchor’under physiological conditions.
A small but important group of intracellular proteins, including many with key regulatory functions such as the members of the ras superfamily, is now known to be post-translationally modified through the S-isoprenylation (with a farnesyl [C15] or a geranylgeranyl [C20] group), and often additionally by the O-methylation, of a cysteine residue at the carboxyl terminus of the mature protein. These modifications have been shown to be critically important to thenormal functioning of such proteinsin situ (and to the transforming and other activities of certainmutant forms as well), as well as to the ability of such proteins to associate with cellular membranes (for reviews see: Takai et al., 1992; Clarke, 1992; Schafer and Rine, 1992; Cox & Der, 1992). Many isoprenylated proteins appear to shuttle between membrane and cytoplasmic compartments as an essential
ACS Publications