Noncovalent immobilized artificial membrane chromatography, an improved method for describing peptide-lipid bilayer interactions. |
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Authors: | E Krause M Dathe T Wieprecht M Bienert |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Molecular Pharmacology, Berlin, Germany. ekrause@fmp-berlin.de |
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Abstract: | A promising approach in assessing hydrophobic peptide-membrane interactions is the use of reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. The present study describes the preparation and properties of a noncovalent immobilized artificial membrane (noncovalent IAM) stationary phase. The noncovalent IAM phase was prepared by coating the C18 chains of a reversed-phase HPLC column with the phospholipid ditetradecanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine. Lipid coating was achieved by pumping a lipid solution in water-2-propanol through the column. The formation of a bilayer-like structure on the chromatographic surface was confirmed by calculating the phospholipid surface density of the stationary phase. The surface density was determined to be approximately 1.95 mumol m-2, which is close to that of lipid vesicles. The coating was found to be stable in chromatographic elution systems containing less than 35% of acetonitrile. Employing this new technique, we determined interaction parameters of a set of helical antibacterial magainin-2-amide peptides with pairwise substitutions of adjacent amino acids by their D-enatiomers. The results demonstrate that the chromatographic retention behavior of peptides on noncovalent IAM stationary phase shows an excellent correlation with lipid affinities to phospholipid vesicles. |
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