|
Researchers
Reveal HIV Peptide’s Possible Pathway Into the Cell
Friday, January 18, 2008
Discovery
furthers push to develop healing uses for a deadly virus
|
A computer generated image of
a cell membrane being “pierced” by HIV peptides.
The positively charged HIV peptides (shown in red) are drawn
to negatively charged phosphates (shown in yellow) in the
cell membrane. When an HIV peptide cannot satisfy itself
with the negative charges available on the cell membrane
surface it is directly attached to, it reaches through the
membrane to grab negatively charged phosphates on the other
side, opening a hole in the cell.
|
Credit: Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute
Two theoretical physicists
at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have uncovered what they
believe is the long-sought-after pathway that an HIV peptide
takes to enter healthy cells. The theorists analyzed two years of
biocomputation and simulation to uncover a surprisingly simple
mechanism describing how this protein fragment penetrates the
cell membrane. The discovery could help scientists treat other
human illnesses by exploiting the same molecules that make HIV so
deadly proficient.
For the last decade, scientists
have known that a positively charged, 11-amino-acid chain of HIV
(HIV-1 Tat protein) can do the nearly unthinkable — cross
through the cell membrane. Sometimes referred to as an “arrow
protein,” HIV-1 Tat pierces the cell membrane and carries a
cargo though the cell membrane.
Its unique cell-puncturing
ability has been the subject of hundreds of scientific articles
investigating the type of materials that can piggyback on the
peptide and also enter the cell. Researchers have proposed using
the peptide to deliver genes for gene therapy and drugs that need
to be delivered directly to a cell. But despite many potential
medical applications, the actual mechanism that opens the holes
in the cell remained undiscovered.
The Rensselaer researchers have
discovered that the positively charged HIV peptide is drawn to
negatively charged groups inside the cell membrane. When the HIV
peptide cannot satisfy itself with the negative charges available
on the cell membrane surface it is directly attached to, it
reaches through the membrane to grab negatively charged groups in
the molecules on the other side, opening a transient hole in the
cell.
“What we saw in our
computer calculations wasn’t at all what we expected to see
when we began,” said co-lead author and Senior
Constellation Professor of Biocomputation and Bioinformatics
Angel Garcia. “The mechanism for entrance in the cell was
clear in one simulation, but in some instances simulations show
one result and you never see that result again. Then we started
doing other simulations and it kept happening again and again.”
Garcia and his collaborator,
postdoctoral researcher Henry Herce, initially set out to uncover
how the peptide interacts with a lipid bilayer that is used to
model the cell membrane. A highly efficient biological system,
the cell membrane is composed of a lipid bilayer (made up of two
monolayers) designed to protect the cell by preventing the influx
of material. Each lipid in the bilayer has a polar, or charged,
end and a non-polar end. A monolayer of lipids faces the exterior
of the cell, with the polar end facing the outside of the cell.
Another monolayer is under the first layer, forming the bilayer.
The polar end of the lower layer faces the interior of the cell,
forming a middle section containing the uncharged halves of both
monolayers.
Because charged particles seek
each other in order to neutralize themselves and achieve a more
stable state, the surface of the polar cell membrane and the
positively charged HIV peptide are drawn to one another. But the
interior of the bilayer is not charged and forms a strong barrier
against the entrance of any charged material.
As was expected, in their
simulations the researchers observed that the positive charges in
the peptide quickly attached to the surface of the cell membrane
and sought out and reacted with negatively charged phosphates
from the charged portion of the lipid bilayer to satisfy their
need for neutrality. “Then the peptide entered the
forbidden territory of the cell,” Garcia said. The
positively charged peptide entered the membrane. “This is
when this mechanism starts to challenge conventional wisdom,”
he said.
The researchers’ model
systems show the peptides grabbing for surrounding negative
charges, but when no more of those charges are available due to
their greedy peptide neighbors, some of the peptides reach into
the cell membrane and grab negative charged phosphates from the
other side. This opens a hole in the cell membrane and allows the
flow of water and other material into the cell. Once all the
peptides have been neutralized, the reaction stops and the hole
closes, leaving behind a healthy, viable cell.
For the paper, the researchers
reported a dozen different simulations run through a high-powered
cluster of computers. Each simulation required a long process of
testing and validating results. Garcia’s computer cluster
is now running simulations on the use of antimicrobial proteins
which will open a pore in the cell and keep it open, killing the
cell. Antimicrobial proteins have promising direct applications
for killing harmful cells in the body.
Garcia hopes to harness the
power of Rensselaer’s newly opened Computational Center for
Nanotechnology Innovations (CCNI), which houses the world’s
most powerful university-based supercomputing center. The CCNI
will allow him to compile two years’ worth of data on his
normal cluster in just 10 to 20 days.
The research was funded by the
National Science Foundation (NSF) through the Rensselaer
Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center for Directed Assembly of
Nanostructures (NSEC) and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
Garcia is a member of the Rensselaer Center for Biotechnology and
Interdisciplinary Studies.
Source:
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

|