1. Academic Validation
  2. Pulmonary surfactant model systems catch the specific interaction of an amphiphilic peptide with anionic phospholipid

Pulmonary surfactant model systems catch the specific interaction of an amphiphilic peptide with anionic phospholipid

  • Biophys J. 2009 Feb 18;96(4):1415-29. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2008.11.022.
Hiromichi Nakahara 1 Sannamu Lee Osamu Shibata
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biophysical Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Nagasaki International University, Nagasaki, Japan.
Abstract

Interfacial behavior was studied in pulmonary surfactant model systems containing an amphiphilic alpha-helical peptide (Hel 13-5), which consists of 13 hydrophobic and five hydrophilic amino acid residues. Fully saturated Phospholipids of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) were utilized to understand specific interactions between anionic DPPG and cationic Hel 13-5 for pulmonary functions. Surface pressure (pi)-molecular area (A) and surface potential (DeltaV)-A isotherms of DPPG/Hel 13-5 and DPPC/DPPG (4:1, mol/mol)/Hel 13-5 preparations were measured to obtain basic information on the phase behavior under compression and expansion processes. The interaction leads to a variation in squeeze-out surface pressures against a mole fraction of Hel 13-5, where Hel 13-5 is eliminated from the surface on compression. The phase behavior was visualized by means of Brewster angle microscopy, fluorescence microscopy, and atomic force microscopy. At low surface pressures, the formation of differently ordered domains in size and shape is induced by electrostatic interactions. The domains independently grow upon compression to high surface pressures, especially in the DPPG/Hel 13-5 system. Under the further compression process, protrusion masses are formed in AFM images in the vicinity of squeeze-out pressures. The protrusion masses, which are attributed to the squeezed-out Hel 13-5, grow larger in lateral size with increasing DPPG content in phospholipid compositions. During subsequent expansion up to 35 mN m(-1), the protrusions retain their height and lateral diameter for the DPPG/Hel 13-5 system, whereas the protrusions become smaller for the DPPC/Hel 13-5 and DPPC/DPPG/Hel 13-5 systems due to a reentrance of the ejected Hel 13-5 into the surface. In this work we detected for the first time, to our knowledge, a remarkably large hysteresis loop for cyclic DeltaV-A isotherms of the binary DPPG/Hel 13-5 preparation. This exciting phenomenon suggests that the specific interaction triggers two completely independent processes for Hel 13-5 during repeated compression and expansion: 1), squeezing-out into the subsolution; and 2), and close packing as a monolayer with DPPG at the interface. These characteristic processes are also strongly supported by atomic force microscopy observations. The data presented here provide complementary information on the mechanism and importance of the specific interaction between the phosphatidylglycerol headgroup and the polarized moiety of native surfactant protein B for biophysical functions of pulmonary Surfactants.

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