Toshiaki Takei, Kazuya Hasegawa, Katsumi Imada, Keiichi Namba, Kouhei Tsumoto, Yukino Kuriki, Masakuni Yoshino, Kazumori Yazaki, Shuichi Kojima, Tsunetomo Takei, Takuya Ueda, Kin-ichiro Miura
BIOCHEMISTRY, 52(16) 2810-2820, Apr, 2013
Polypeptide alpha 3 (21 residues), with three repeats of a seven-amino-acid sequence (LETLAKA)(3), forms an amphipathic alpha-helix and a long fibrous assembly. Here, we investigated the ability of alpha 3-series polypeptides (with 14-42 residues) of various chain lengths to form alpha-helices and fibrous assemblies. Polypeptide alpha 2 (14 residues), with two same-sequence repeats, did not form an alpha-helix, but polypeptide alpha 2L (15 residues; alpha 2 with one additional leucine residue on its carboxyl terminal) did form an alpha-helix and fibrous assembly. Fibrous assembly formation was associated with polypeptides at least as long as polypeptide alpha 2L and with five leucine residues, indicating that the C-terminal leucine has a critical element for stabilization of alpha-helix and fibril formation. In contrast, polypeptides alpha 5 (35 residues) and alpha 6 (42 residues) aggregated easily, although they formed alpha-helices. A 15-35-residue chain was required for fibrous assembly formation. Electron microscopy and X-ray fiber diffraction showed that the thinnest fibrous assemblies of polypeptides were about 20 angstrom and had periodicities coincident with the length of the alpha-helix in a longitudinal direction. These results indicated that the alpha-helix structures were orientated along the fibrous axis and assembled into a bundle. Furthermore, the width and length of fibrous assemblies changed with changes in the pH value, resulting in variations in the charged states of the residues. Our results suggest that the formation of fibrous assemblies of amphipathic alpha-helices is due to the assembly of bundles via the hydrophobic faces of the helices and extension with hydrophobic noncovalent bonds containing a leucine.