The influence of specific L- to D-amino acid substitutions on the interaction of pardaxin, a shark repellent neurotoxin polypeptide, with phospholipid vesicles and human erythrocytes is described. Twelve modified, truncated, or fluorescently labeled [with the fluorophore 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa- 1,3-diazole-4-yl (NBD) at their N-terminal amino acid] analogues of pardaxin were synthesized by a solid-phase method. Fluorescence measurements were used to monitor the interaction of the analogues with membranes [Rapaport, D., & Shai, Y. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 23769-23775]. Upon titration of solutions containing the NBD-labeled peptides with small unilamellar vesicles, the fluorescent emission spectra of all NBD-labeled peptides displayed similar blue-shifts, in addition to enhanced intensities, upon relocation of the probe to the more apolar environment. Binding isotherms were constructed from which surface partition constants, in the range of 10(4) M-1, were derived. The existence of an aggregation process, suggested by the shape of the binding isotherms, could be associated only with those analogues in which the N-helix (residues 1-9) was not perturbed. The alpha-helical content of the analogues was estimated by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy, both before and after binding to vesicles at neutral pH. The ability of the peptides to dissipate a diffusion potential and to cause calcein release, as well as to lyse human erythrocytes, served to functionally characterize the peptides. The results support a two alpha-helix model, with a bend at position 13, as best describing pardaxin in its membrane-bound state. The study also demonstrates that local configurational changes of amino acids, including prolines, do not affect the abilities of the analogues to bind to phospholipid membranes, but do have some effect on their membrane-permeating activities.