A lipocentric view of peptide-induced pores
Open Access
- 26 March 2011
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in European Biophysics Journal
- Vol. 40 (4), 399-415
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00249-011-0693-4
Abstract
Although lipid membranes serve as effective sealing barriers for the passage of most polar solutes, nonmediated leakage is not completely improbable. A high activation energy normally keeps unassisted bilayer permeation at a very low frequency, but lipids are able to self-organize as pores even in peptide-free and protein-free membranes. The probability of leakage phenomena increases under conditions such as phase coexistence, external stress or perturbation associated to binding of nonlipidic molecules. Here, we argue that pore formation can be viewed as an intrinsic property of lipid bilayers, with strong similarities in the structure and mechanism between pores formed with participation of peptides, lipidic pores induced by different types of stress, and spontaneous transient bilayer defects driven by thermal fluctuations. Within such a lipocentric framework, amphipathic peptides are best described as pore-inducing rather than pore-forming elements. Active peptides bound to membranes can be understood as a source of internal surface tension which facilitates pore formation by diminishing the high activation energy barrier. This first or immediate action of the peptide has some resemblance to catalysis. However, the presence of membrane-active peptides has the additional effect of displacing the equilibrium towards the pore-open state, which is then maintained over long times, and reducing the size of initial individual pores. Thus, pore-inducing peptides, regardless of their sequence and oligomeric organization, can be assigned a double role of increasing the probability of pore formation in membranes to high levels as well as stabilizing these pores after they appear.Keywords
This publication has 137 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pores Formed by Baxα5 Relax to a Smaller Size and Keep at EquilibriumBiophysical Journal, 2010
- Describing the Mechanism of Antimicrobial Peptide Action with the Interfacial Activity ModelACS Chemical Biology, 2010
- Antimicrobial peptides bind more strongly to membrane poresBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes, 2010
- Mechanisms of Antimicrobial, Cytolytic, and Cell-Penetrating Peptides: From Kinetics to ThermodynamicsBiochemistry, 2009
- The Temperature Dependence of Lipid Membrane Permeability, its Quantized Nature, and the Influence of AnestheticsBiophysical Journal, 2009
- Electroporation for the Delivery of DNA-based Vaccines and Immunotherapeutics: Current Clinical DevelopmentsMolecular Therapy, 2009
- Free Energies of Molecular Bound States in Lipid Bilayers: Lethal Concentrations of Antimicrobial PeptidesBiophysical Journal, 2009
- Magainin 2 Revisited: A Test of the Quantitative Model for the All-or-None Permeabilization of Phospholipid VesiclesBiophysical Journal, 2009
- Biomolecular Engineering by Combinatorial Design and High-Throughput Screening: Small, Soluble Peptides That Permeabilize MembranesJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2008
- Antimicrobial peptides of multicellular organismsNature, 2002