ABSTRACT
The peptide alamethicin provides a system for engineering ion channel charge selectivity. To define alamethicin charge selectivity experimentally, we measured single-channel current-voltage relationships in KCl gradients using covalently linked peptide dimers. Two factors were found to contribute to the charge selectivity of these channels: (i) the ionic strength of the surrounding solutions; and (ii) the distribution of fixed charge on the peptide. Native alamethicin channels exhibited either cation selectivity or anion selectivity depending on which end of the channel was at the low salt side of the membrane. When the glutamine residue at position 18 in the sequence was replaced with a lysine residue, an anion-selective channel was obtained regardless of which end of the channel was at the low salt side of the membrane.
Subject(s)
Alamethicin/chemistry , Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemistry , Protein Engineering , Amino Acid Sequence , Drug Design , Electrochemistry , Molecular Sequence DataABSTRACT
The peptide alamethicin self-assembles to form helix bundle ion channels in membranes. Previous macroscopic measurements have shown that these channels are mildly cation-selective. Models indicate that a source of cation selectivity is a zone of partial negative charge toward the C-terminal end of the peptide. We synthesized an alamethicin derivative with a lysine in this zone (replacing the glutamine at position 18 in the sequence). Microscopic (single-channel) measurements demonstrate that dimeric alamethicin-lysine18 (alm-K18) forms mildly anion-selective channels under conditions where channels formed by the parent peptide are cation-selective. Long-range electrostatic interactions can explain the inversion of ion selectivity and the conductance properties of alamethicin channels.