» Articles » PMID: 10096891

Simulation Study of a Gramicidin/lipid Bilayer System in Excess Water and Lipid. I. Structure of the Molecular Complex

Overview
Journal Biophys J
Publisher Cell Press
Specialty Biophysics
Date 1999 Mar 30
PMID 10096891
Citations 38
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

This paper reports on a simulation of a gramicidin channel inserted into a fluid phase DMPC bilayer with 100 lipid molecules. Two lipid molecules per leaflet were removed to insert the gramicidin, so the resulting preparation had 96 lipid molecules and 3209 water molecules. Constant surface tension boundary conditions were employed. Like previous simulations with a lower lipid/gramicidin ratio (Woolf, T. B., and B. Roux. 1996. Proteins: Struct., Funct., Genet. 24:92-114), it is found that tryptophan-water hydrogen bonds are more common than tryptophan-phospholipid hydrogen bonds. However, one of the tryptophan NH groups entered into an unusually long-lived hydrogen bonding pattern with two glycerol oxygens of one of the phospholipid molecules. Comparisons were made between the behavior of the lipids adjacent to the channel with those farther away. It was found that hydrocarbon chains of lipids adjacent to the channel had higher-order parameters than those farther away. The thickness of the lipid bilayer immediately adjacent to the channel was greater than it was farther away. In general, the lipids adjacent to the membrane had similar orientations to those seen by Woolf and Roux, while those farther away had similar orientations to those pertaining before the insertion of the gramicidin. A corollary to this observation is that the thickness of the hydrocarbon region adjacent to the gramicidin was much thicker than what other studies have identified as the "hydrophobic length" of the gramicidin channel.

Citing Articles

Collective dynamics in lipid membranes containing transmembrane peptides.

Kelley E, Butler P, Nagao M Soft Matter. 2021; 17(23):5671-5681.

PMID: 33942045 PMC: 10466476. DOI: 10.1039/d1sm00314c.


Quantitative Characterization of Protein-Lipid Interactions by Free Energy Simulation between Binary Bilayers.

Park S, Yeom M, Andersen O, Pastor R, Im W J Chem Theory Comput. 2019; 15(11):6491-6503.

PMID: 31560853 PMC: 7076909. DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.9b00815.


Combining 25-Hydroxycholesterol with an HIV Fusion Inhibitor Peptide: Interaction with Biomembrane Model Systems and Human Blood Cells.

Gomes B, Sanna G, Madeddu S, Hollmann A, Santos N ACS Infect Dis. 2019; 5(4):582-591.

PMID: 30816690 PMC: 6483092. DOI: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.8b00321.


Gramicidin Lateral Distribution in Phospholipid Membranes: Fluorescence Phasor Plots and Statistical Mechanical Model.

Sugar I, Bonanno A, Chong P Int J Mol Sci. 2018; 19(11).

PMID: 30469389 PMC: 6274966. DOI: 10.3390/ijms19113690.


Atomic Recombination in Dynamic Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry Probes Distance in Lipid Assemblies: A Nanometer Chemical Ruler.

Moss 3rd F, Boxer S J Am Chem Soc. 2016; 138(51):16737-16744.

PMID: 27977192 PMC: 5287923. DOI: 10.1021/jacs.6b10655.


References
1.
HLADKY S, Haydon D . Discreteness of conductance change in bimolecular lipid membranes in the presence of certain antibiotics. Nature. 1970; 225(5231):451-3. DOI: 10.1038/225451a0. View

2.
Rice D, Oldfield E . Deuterium nuclear magnetic resonance studies of the interaction between dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine and gramicidin A'. Biochemistry. 1979; 18(15):3272-9. DOI: 10.1021/bi00582a012. View

3.
Ketchem R, Lee K, Huo S, Cross T . Macromolecular structural elucidation with solid-state NMR-derived orientational constraints. J Biomol NMR. 1996; 8(1):1-14. DOI: 10.1007/BF00198135. View

4.
Ketchem R, Roux B, Cross T . High-resolution polypeptide structure in a lamellar phase lipid environment from solid state NMR derived orientational constraints. Structure. 1998; 5(12):1655-69. DOI: 10.1016/s0969-2126(97)00312-2. View

5.
Girshman J, Greathouse D, Koeppe 2nd R, Andersen O . Gramicidin channels in phospholipid bilayers with unsaturated acyl chains. Biophys J. 1997; 73(3):1310-9. PMC: 1181031. DOI: 10.1016/S0006-3495(97)78164-5. View