posted on 2023-07-03, 14:35authored byTomás
F. D. Silva, Hannah Visca, Craig Klumpp, Oleg A. Andreev, Yana K. Reshetnyak, Miguel Machuqueiro
Most processes at
the water–membrane interface often involve
protonation events in proteins or peptides that trigger important
biological functions and events. This is the working principle behind
the pHLIP peptide technology. A key titrating aspartate (Asp14 in wt) is required to protonate to induce the insertion process,
increase its thermodynamic stability when membrane-embedded, and trigger
the peptide’s overall clinical functionality. At the core of
pHLIP properties, the aspartate pKa and
protonation are a consequence of the residue side chain sensing the
changing surrounding environment. In this work, we characterized how
the microenvironment of the key aspartate residue (Asp13 in the investigated
pHLIP variants) can be modulated by a simple point mutation of a cationic
residue (ArgX) at distinct sequence positions (R10, R14, R15, and
R17). We carried out a multidisciplinary study using pHRE simulations
and experimental measurements. Fluorescence and circular dichroism
measurements were carried out to establish the stability of pHLIP
variants in state III and establish the kinetics of the insertion
and exit of the peptide from the membrane. We estimated the contribution
of the arginine to the local electrostatic microenvironment, which
promotes or hinders other electrostatic players from coexisting in
the Asp interaction shell. Our data indicate that the stability and
kinetics of the peptide insertion and exit from the membrane are altered
when Arg is topologically available for a direct salt-bridge formation
with Asp13. Hence, the position of arginine contributes to fine-tuning
the pH responses of pHLIP peptides, which finds wide applications
in clinics.