Cyclotides are disulfide-rich cyclic
peptides isolated from plants,
which are extremely stable against thermal and proteolytic degradation,
with a variety of biological activities including antibacterial, hemolytic,
anti-HIV, and anti-tumor. Most of these bioactivities are related
to their preference for binding to certain types of phospholipids
and subsequently disrupt lipid membranes. In the present study, we
use a cyclotide, cycloviolacin O2 (cyO2), as a model system to investigate
its interactions with three lipid bilayers 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylethanolamine
(POPE), 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoglycerol
(POPG)-doped POPE, and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC),
to help understand its potential mechanism of action toward the membranes
at the molecular level using molecular dynamics simulations. In our
simulations, cyO2 repeatedly forms stable binding complexes with the
POPE-containing bilayers, while within the same simulation time scale,
it “jumps” back and forth on the surface of the POPC
bilayer without a strong binding. Detailed analyses reveal that the
electrostatic attraction is the main driving force for the initial
bindings between cyO2 and the lipids, but with strikingly different
strengths in different bilayers. For the POPE-containing bilayers,
the charged residues of cyO2 attract both POPE amino and phosphate
head groups favorably; meanwhile, its hydrophobic residues are deeply
inserted into the lipid hydrophobic tails (core) of the membrane,
thus forming stable binding complexes. In contrast, POPC lipids with
three methyl groups on the amino head group create a steric hindrance
when interacting with cyO2, thus resulting in a relatively difficult
binding of cyO2 on POPC compared to POPE. Our current findings provide
additional insights for a better understanding of how cyO2 binds to
the POPE-containing membrane, which should shed light on the future
cyclotide-based antibacterial agent design.