6 research outputs found

    Temperature-Triggered Fusion of Vesicles Composed of Right-Handed and Left-Handed Amphiphilic Helical Peptides

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    Vesicles prepared from a mixture of (Sar)25-b-(l-Leu-Aib)6 (SLL) and (Sar)25-b-(d-Leu-Aib)6 (SDL) fused with themselves upon heating to 90 °C. The vesicles also fused with (Sar)28-b-(l-Leu-Aib)8 vesicles upon heating to 90 °C. The temperature-triggered fusion was due to the phase transition of the mixed membrane of SLL and SDL at 90 °C and should be driven by the bending energy stored in the stereocomplex membrane upon taking a vesicular structure

    Facile and Precise Formation of Unsymmetric Vesicles Using the Helix Dipole, Stereocomplex, and Steric Effects of Peptides

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    Unsymmetrical vesicular membranes were prepared from a binary mixture of the A<sub>3</sub>B-type and the AB-type host polypeptides, which were composed of the hydrophilic block (A) and the hydrophobic helical block (B) but with a different helix sense between the two host polypeptides. TEM and DLS revealed the formation of vesicles with ca. 100 nm diameter. The molecular assembly was driven by hydrophobic interaction, stereocomplex formation, and dipole–dipole interaction between hydrophobic helices. Furthermore, the A<sub>3</sub>B-type host polypeptide extended the hydrophilic block to the outer surface of vesicles as a result of the steric effect, resulting in the formation of unsymmetrical vesicular membranes. As a result, a functionalized AB-type guest polypeptide having the same helix sense with the A<sub>3</sub>B-type host polypeptide exposed the hydrophilic block to the outer surface. In contrast, an AB-type guest polypeptide having the same helix sense with the AB-type host polypeptide oriented the hydrophilic block to the inner surface. Functionalization of either the outer or inner surface of the binary vesicle is therefore facile to achieve when using either the right- or the left-handed helix of the functionalized guest polypeptide

    Morphology Control between Twisted Ribbon, Helical Ribbon, and Nanotube Self-Assemblies with His-Containing Helical Peptides in Response to pH Change

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    pH-Responsive molecular assemblies with a variation in morphology ranging from a twisted ribbon, a helical ribbon, to a nanotube were prepared from a novel A<sub>3</sub>B-type amphiphilic peptide having three hydrophilic poly­(sarcosine) (A block) chains, a hydrophobic helical dodecapeptide (B block), and two histidine (His) residues between the A<sub>3</sub> and B blocks. The A<sub>3</sub>B-type peptide adopted morphologies of the twisted ribbon at pH 3.0, the helical ribbon at pH 5.0, and the nanotube at pH 7.4, depending upon the protonation states of the two His residues. On the other hand, another A<sub>3</sub>B-type peptide having one His residue between the A<sub>3</sub> and B blocks showed a morphology change only between the helical ribbon and the relatively planar sheets with pH variation in this range. The morphology change is thus induced by one- or two-charge generation at the linking site of the hydrophilic and hydrophobic blocks of the component amphiphiles but in different ways

    Data_Sheet_1_Isolation of a Novel Bacterial Strain Capable of Producing Abundant Extracellular Membrane Vesicles Carrying a Single Major Cargo Protein and Analysis of Its Transport Mechanism.pdf

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    Extracellular membrane vesicles (EMVs) play an important role in various bacterial activities. EMVs have potential for use as vaccines, drug-delivery vehicles, platforms for extracellular production of recombinant proteins, and so on. In this study, we newly isolated a cold-adapted bacterium, Shewanella vesiculosa HM13, which abundantly produces EMVs, characterized them, and analyzed their cargo transport mechanism. S. vesiculosa HM13, isolated from the intestine of a horse mackerel as a prospective host for a low-temperature secretory protein expression system, produced a single major secretory protein, P49, of unknown function in the culture supernatant. Analysis using sucrose density gradient ultracentrifugation indicated that P49 is a cargo protein carried by EMVs. S. vesiculosa HM13 displayed extensive blebbing on the surface of the outer membrane, and the size of blebs was comparable to that of EMVs. These blebs are thought to be precursors of the EMVs. Disruption of the P49 gene resulted in only a marginal decrease in the EMV production, indicating that the EMVs are produced even in the absence of the major cargo protein. Whole genome sequencing of S. vesiculosa HM13 revealed that this bacterium has a gene cluster coding for a non-canonical type II protein secretion system (T2SS) homolog in addition to a gene cluster coding for canonical T2SS. The P49 gene was located downstream of the former gene cluster. To examine the role of the putative non-canonical T2SS-like translocon, we disrupted the gene coding for a putative outer membrane channel of the translocon, named GspD2. The gspD2 disruption lead to disappearance of P49 in the EMV fraction, whereas the production of EMVs was not significantly affected by this mutation. These results are indicative that the T2SS-like machinery functions as a novel type of protein translocon responsible for selective cargo loading to the EMVs. We also found that GFP fused to the C-terminus of P49 expressed in S. vesiculosa HM13 was transported to EMVs, indicating that P49 is useful as a carrier to deliver the fusion partner to EMVs. These findings deepen our understanding of the mechanism of biogenesis of EMVs and facilitate their applications.</p

    Self-Assemblies of Triskelion A<sub>2</sub>B-Type Amphiphilic Polypeptide Showing pH-Responsive Morphology Transformation

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    A pH-responsive rolled-sheet morphology was prepared from a triskelion A<sub>2</sub>B-type amphiphilic polypeptide having a histidine residue as a pH-responsive unit. The dimensions of the rolled sheet were 85 nm diameter and 210 nm length with a sheet turn number of 2.0 at pH 7.4. Upon decreasing the pH from 7.4 to 5.0, the layer spacing of the rolled sheets was widened from ca. 9 to ca. 19 nm due to electrostatic repulsion caused by histidine protonation. This morphology change occurred reversibly with a pH change between 7.4 and 5.0. The molecular packing in the rolled sheets was shown to be loosened at pH 5.0 on the basis of electron diffraction measurements. The tightness of the rolled sheets was thus controlled reversibly by a pH change due to a single protonation in the amphiphilic polypeptide
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