Covalent linkage of a synthetic peptide to a fluorescent phospholipid and its incorporation into supported phospholipid monolayers
- PMID: 6712948
- DOI: 10.1016/0005-2736(84)90512-1
Covalent linkage of a synthetic peptide to a fluorescent phospholipid and its incorporation into supported phospholipid monolayers
Abstract
A number of fluorescent peptide-lipid conjugates have been synthesized. Peptides with ten or eleven amino acids are linked through a single lysine residue to the headgroup of phosphatidylethanolamine, fluorescently labelled on one acyl chain, using homobifunctional disuccinimidyl crosslinking reagents. Peptide-lipids can be further derivatized with the hapten dinitrophenyl. Purified peptide-lipids have been incorporated into dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine monolayers at the interface of air and phosphate-buffered saline, at concentrations of up to 11 mol%. For equal average molecular areas, monolayers containing peptide-lipids have higher surface pressures than pure lipid monolayers; for equal surface pressures, peptide-lipid monolayers have higher average molecular areas than pure lipid monolayers. When the peptide-lipid monolayers are transferred to hydrophobic glass slides, the fluorescence appears uniformly distributed. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching measurements indicate that peptide-lipids diffuse in the monolayer with coefficient 1.5 X 10(-9) cm2/s, which is much smaller than that of typical lipids in fluid membranes. In addition, the diffusion coefficient of peptide-lipids decreases with increasing peptide-lipid concentration. We conclude that the peptide portion of the peptide-lipid associates with the lipid monolayer and/or that peptide-lipids oligomerize.
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