Issue 71, 2018, Issue in Progress

Cholesterol-sensing role of phenylalanine in the interaction of human islet amyloid polypeptide with lipid bilayers

Abstract

The interactions between hIAPP and the pancreatic β-cells are associated with β-cell death in type II diabetes. Cholesterol modulates hIAPP-membrane interaction and hIAPP aggregation. The molecular mechanism underlying this is not well understood. Here we explore the cholesterol-sensing role of F15 in the interactions of hIAPP and hIAPP1–19 with various compositions of lipids, including DOPC, DPPC and DOPC/DPPC using NMR, CD, ThT fluorescence and dye leakage assays. We show that both hIAPP and hIAPP1–19 are more potent in the disruption to the membranes with cholesterol than they are in the disruption to the membranes without cholesterol. A substitution of F15 by leucine affects the binding and disruption of the peptides to the membranes slightly in the absence of cholesterol, but decreases the activities largely in the presence of cholesterol. F15 also plays a role in accelerating fibrillar assembly of hIAPP, but the function is independent of cholesterol in nature. The promotion of cholesterol to the disruptive potency of hIAPP is more effective in the membrane with raft-like domains than in the membrane with a dispersed distribution of cholesterol. Our results suggest that F15 plays a key role in the cholesterol-sensing binding and disruption of hIAPP to the PC membranes and the distribution of cholesterol in the membranes has an influence on the disruptive activity of hIAPP.

Graphical abstract: Cholesterol-sensing role of phenylalanine in the interaction of human islet amyloid polypeptide with lipid bilayers

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
02 Sep 2018
Accepted
21 Nov 2018
First published
05 Dec 2018
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2018,8, 40581-40588

Cholesterol-sensing role of phenylalanine in the interaction of human islet amyloid polypeptide with lipid bilayers

R. Hao, Y. Li, L. Guan, T. Lu, F. Meng, C. Wang and F. Li, RSC Adv., 2018, 8, 40581 DOI: 10.1039/C8RA07310D

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