Inés Plasencia
Complutense University of Madrid
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Featured researches published by Inés Plasencia.
Biochemical Journal | 2004
Inés Plasencia; Luis Rivas; Kevin M. W. Keough; Derek Marsh; Jesús Pérez-Gil
In the present study, 13-residue peptides with sequences corresponding to the native N-terminal segment of pulmonary SP-C (surfactant protein C) have been synthesized and their interaction with phospholipid bilayers characterized. The peptides are soluble in aqueous media but associate spontaneously with bilayers composed of either zwitterionic (phosphatidylcholine) or anionic (phosphatidylglycerol) phospholipids. The peptides show higher affinity for anionic than for zwitterionic membranes. Interaction of the peptides with both zwitterionic and anionic membranes promotes phospholipid vesicle aggregation, and leakage of the aqueous content of the vesicles. The lipid-peptide interaction includes a significant hydrophobic component for both zwitterionic and anionic membranes, although the interaction with phosphatidylglycerol bilayers is also electrostatic in nature. The effects of the SP-C N-terminal peptides on the membrane structure are mediated by significant perturbations of the packing order and mobility of phospholipid acyl chain segments deep in the bilayer, as detected by differential scanning calorimetry and spin-label ESR. These results suggest that the N-terminal region of SP-C, even in the absence of acylation, possesses an intrinsic propensity to interact with and perturb phospholipid bilayers, thereby potentially facilitating SP-C promoting bilayer-monolayer transitions at the alveolar spaces.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2008
Inés Plasencia; Florian Baumgart; David Andreu; Derek Marsh; Jesús Pérez-Gil
SP-C, the smallest pulmonary surfactant protein, is required for the formation and stability of surface-active films at the air-liquid interface in the lung. The protein consists of a hydrophobic transmembrane alpha-helix and a cationic N-terminal segment containing palmitoylated cysteines. Recent evidence suggests that the N-terminal segment is of critical importance for SP-C function. In the present work, the role of palmitoylation in modulating the lipid-protein interactions of the N-terminal segment of SP-C has been studied by analyzing the effect of palmitoylated and non-palmitoylated synthetic peptides designed to mimic the N-terminal segment on the dynamic properties of phospholipid bilayers, recorded by spin-label electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. Both palmitoylated and non-palmitoylated peptides decrease the mobility of phosphatidylcholine (5-PCSL) and phosphatidylglycerol (5-PGSL) spin probes in dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) or dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) bilayers. In zwitterionic DPPC membranes, both peptides have a greater effect at temperatures below than above the main gel-to-liquid-crystalline phase transition, the palmitoylated peptide inducing greater immobilisation of the lipid than does the non-palmitoylated form. In anionic DPPG membranes, both palmitoylated and non-palmitoylated peptides have similar immobilizing effects, probably dominated by electrostatic interactions. Both palmitoylated and non-palmitoylated peptides have effects comparable to whole native SP-C, as regards improving the gel phase solubility of phospholipid spin probes and increasing the polarity of the bilayer surface monitored by pK shifts of fatty acid spin probes. This indicates that a significant part of the perturbing properties of SP-C in phospholipid bilayers is mediated by interactions of the N-terminal segment. The effect of SP-C N-terminal peptides on the chain flexibility gradient of DPPC and DPPG bilayers is consistent with the existence of a peptide-promoted interdigitated phase at temperatures below the main gel-to-liquid-crystalline phase transition. The palmitoylated peptide, but not the non-palmitoylated version, is able to stably segregate interdigitated and non-interdigitated populations of phospholipids in DPPC bilayers. This feature suggests that the palmitoylated N-terminal segment stabilizes ordered domains such as those containing interdigitated lipids. We propose that palmitoylation may be important to promote and facilitate association of SP-C and SP-C-containing membranes with ordered lipid structures such as those potentially existing in highly compressed states of the interfacial surfactant film.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2001
Inés Plasencia; L Rivas; Cristina Casals; Kevin M. W. Keough; Jesús Pérez-Gil
Predictive studies suggest that the known sequences of the N-terminal segment of surfactant protein SP-C from animal species have an intrinsic tendency to form beta-turns, but there are important differences on the probable location of these motifs in different SP-C species. Our hypothesis is that intrinsic structural determinants of the sequence of the N-terminal region of SP-C could define conformation, acylation and perhaps surface properties of the mature protein. To test this hypothesis we have synthesized peptides corresponding to the 13-residue N-terminal sequence of porcine and canine SP-C, and studied their structural behaviour in solution and in phospholipid bilayers and monolayers. In these peptides, leucine at position 1 of both sequences has been replaced by tryptophan in order to allow their study by fluorescence spectroscopy. Far-u.v. circular dichroism spectra of the peptides in aqueous and organic solutions and in phospholipid micelles or vesicles are consistent with predicted conformational differences between the porcine and the canine sequences. Both families of peptides showed changes in their fluorescence emission spectra in the presence of phospholipids that were consistent with spontaneous lipid/peptide interactions. Both canine and porcine peptides were able to form monolayers at air-liquid interfaces, the canine peptides occupying lower area/molecule and being compressible to higher pressures than the porcine sequences. The peptides also shifted the isotherms and perturbed the packing of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) monolayers, the effects being always higher in anionic than in zwitterionic lipids, and also substantially higher in films containing canine peptide in comparison to porcine peptide. Acylation of cysteines at the N-terminal end of SP-C may modulate these intrinsic conformational features and the changes induced could be important for the development of its surface activity.
Biochemical Journal | 2001
Inés Plasencia; Antonio Cruz; Cristina Casals; Jesús Pérez-Gil
A dansylated form of porcine surfactant-associated protein C (Dns-SP-C), bearing a single dansyl group at its N-terminal end, has been used to characterize the lipid-protein and protein-protein interactions of SP-C reconstituted in phospholipid bilayers, using fluorescence spectroscopy. The fluorescence emission spectrum of Dns-SP-C in phospholipid bilayers is similar to the spectrum of dansyl-phosphatidylethanolamine, and indicates that the N-terminal end of the protein is located at the surface of the membranes and is exposed to the aqueous environment. In membranes containing phosphatidylglycerol (PG), the fluorescence of Dns-SP-C shows a 3-fold increase with respect to the fluorescence of phosphatidylcholine (PC), suggesting that electrostatic lipid-protein interactions induce important effects on the structure and disposition of the N-terminal segment of the protein in these membranes. This effect saturates above 20% PG molar content in the bilayers. The parameters for the interaction of Dns-SP-C with PC or PG have been estimated from the changes induced in the fluorescence emission spectrum of the protein. The protein had similar K(d) values for its interaction with the different phospholipids tested, of the order of a few micromolar. Cooling of Dns-SP-C-containing dipalmitoyl PC bilayers to temperatures below the phase transition of the phospholipid produced a progressive blue-shift of the fluorescence emission of the protein. This effect is interpreted as a consequence of the transfer of the N-terminal segment of the protein into less polar environments that originate during protein lateral segregation. This suggests that conformation and interactions of the N-terminal segment of SP-C could be important in regulating the lateral distribution of the protein in surfactant bilayers and monolayers. Potential SP-B-SP-C interactions have been explored by analysing fluorescence resonance energy transfer (RET) from the single tryptophan in porcine SP-B to dansyl in Dns-SP-C. RET has been detected in samples where native SP-B and Dns-SP-C were concurrently reconstituted in PC or PG bilayers. However, the analysis of the dependence of RET on the protein density excluded specific SP-B-Dns-SP-C associations.
Archive | 1996
Jesús Pérez-Gil; Antonio Cruz; Miguel L. F. Ruano; Eugenio Miguel; Inés Plasencia; Cristina Casals
The terminal airways and alveoli of lungs are stabilized and protected against collapse by the presence of a specialized material called pulmonary surfactant. In order to achieve its function, this system must be spread as a monomolecular layer at the air-water interface of the aqueous film covering the alveolar epithelium, substantially reducing its surface tension (Keough, 1992).
Biochemistry | 2002
Xiaohong Bi; Carol R. Flach; Jesús Pérez-Gil; Inés Plasencia; David Andreu; Eliandre de Oliveira; Richard Mendelsohn
Biochemistry | 1998
Antonio Cruz; Cristina Casals; Inés Plasencia; Derek Marsh; Jesús Pérez-Gil
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2005
Inés Plasencia; Kevin M. W. Keough; Jesús Pérez-Gil
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2006
Dunja Lukovic; Inés Plasencia; Francisco J. Taberner; Jesús Salgado; Juan J. Calvete; Jesús Pérez-Gil; Ismael Mingarro
Analytical Biochemistry | 2001
Inés Plasencia; Antonio Cruz; José Luis López-Lacomba; Cristina Casals; Jesús Pérez-Gil