posted on 2022-05-04, 20:05authored byJacob
M. Remington, Jonathon B. Ferrell, Severin T. Schneebeli, Jianing Li
Peptide binding to membranes is common
and fundamental in biochemistry
and biophysics and critical for applications ranging from drug delivery
to the treatment of bacterial infections. However, it is largely unclear,
from a theoretical point of view, what peptides of different sequences
and structures share in the membrane-binding and insertion process.
In this work, we analyze three prototypical membrane-binding peptides
(α-helical magainin, PGLa, and β-hairpin tachyplesin)
during membrane binding, using molecular details provided by Markov
state modeling and microsecond-long molecular dynamics simulations.
By leveraging both geometric and data-driven collective variables
that capture the essential physics of the amphiphilic and cationic
peptide–membrane interactions, we reveal how the slowest kinetic
process of membrane binding is the dynamic rolling of the peptide
from an attached to a fully bound state. These results not only add
fundamental knowledge of the theory of how peptides bind to biological
membranes but also open new avenues to study general peptides in more
complex environments for further applications.