Publications by authors named "B Pispisa"

Peptide-induced vesicle leakage is a common experimental test for the membrane-perturbing activity of antimicrobial peptides. The leakage kinetics is usually very slow, requiring minutes to hours for complete release of vesicle contents, and exhibits a biphasic behavior. We report here that, in the case of the peptaibol trichogin GA IV, all processes involved in peptide-membrane interaction, such as peptide-membrane association, peptide aggregation, and peptide translocation, take place on a timescale much shorter than the leakage kinetics.

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Alamethicin (Alm) is one of the most extensively studied membrane-active antibiotic peptides, but several aspects of its mechanism of action are still under debate. In this study, synthetic analogues of natural Alm F50/5 (Alm-N), labeled with a 9H-fluoren-9-yl group at the N- (F-Alm) or C-terminus (Alm-F), were employed to investigate the position and orientation of this peptide in the membrane environment. Depth-dependent fluorescence quenching and polarized ATR-FT-IR experiments demonstrated that, in the absence of a transmembrane potential, Alm inserts its N-terminus into the membrane, while the C-terminus is exposed to the outer aqueous phase.

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Mutations of the protein tyrosine phosphatase SHP-2 are implicated in human diseases, causing Noonan syndrome (NS) and related developmental disorders or contributing to leukemogenesis depending on the specific amino acid substitution involved. SHP-2 is composed by a catalytic (PTP) and two regulatory (N-SH2 and C-SH2) domains that bind to signaling partners and control the enzymatic activity by limiting the accessibility of the catalytic site. Wild type SHP-2 and four disease-associated mutants recurring in hematologic malignancies (Glu76Lys and Ala72Val) or causing NS (Glu76Asp and Ala72Ser), with affected residues located in the PTP-interacting region of the N-SH2 domain, were analyzed by molecular dynamics simulations and in vitro biochemical assays.

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The effect of lipidation on the membrane perturbing activity of peptaibol antibiotics was investigated by performing a comparative study on two synthetic analogues of the natural peptide trichogin GA IV. Both analogues were labeled with a hydrophobic fluorescent probe, but one of them lacked the N-terminal n-octanoyl chain, present in the natural peptide. Spectroscopic studies show that the fatty acyl chain produces two opposite effects: it increases the affinity of the monomeric peptide for the membrane phase, but, at the same time, it favors peptide aggregation in water, thus inhibiting membrane binding by reducing the effective monomer concentration.

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