Violacein is a tryptophan-derived purple pigment produced by environmental bacteria, which displays multiple biological activities, including strong inhibition of Gram-positive pathogens. Here, we applied a combination of experimental approaches to identify the mechanism by which violacein kills Gram-positive bacteria. Fluorescence microscopy showed that violacein quickly and dramatically permeabilizes B. subtilis and S. aureus cells. Cell permeabilization was accompanied by the appearance of visible discontinuities or rips in the cytoplasmic membrane, but it did not affect the cell wall. Using in vitro experiments, we showed that violacein binds directly to liposomes made with commercial and bacterial phospholipids and perturbs their structure and permeability. Furthermore, molecular dynamics simulations were employed to reveal how violacein inserts itself into lipid bilayers. Thus, our combined results demonstrate that the cytoplasmic membrane is the primary target of violacein in bacteria. The implications of this finding for the development of violacein as a therapeutic agent are discussed.
The properties of ionic micelles depend on the nature of the counterion, and these effects become more evident as the ion adsorption at the interface increases. Prediction of the relative extent of ion adsorption is required for rational design of ionic micellar aggregates. Unlike the well understood adsorption of monatomic ions, the adsorption of polyatomic ions is not easily predicted. We combined experimental and computational methods to evaluate the affinity of hydrotropic ions, i.e., ions with polar and apolar regions, to the surface of positively charged micelles. We analyzed cationic micelles of dodecyltrimethylammonium and six hydrotropic counterions: methanesulfonate, trifluoromethanesulfonate, benzenesulfonate, acetate, trifluoroacetate and benzoate. Our results demonstrated that the apolar region of hydrotropic ions had the largest influence on micellar properties. The dehydration of the apolar region of hydrotropic ions upon their adsorption at the micellar interface determined the ion adsorption extension, differently to what was expected based on Collins' law of matching affinities. These results may lead to more general models to describe the adsorption of ions, including polyatomic ions, at the micellar interface.
Two commercial exogenous pulmonary surfactants, Curosurf and Survanta, are investigated. Their thermotropic behavior and associated structural changes for the samples in bulk are characterized and described. For Survanta, the obtained results of differential scanning calorimetry showed a thermogram with three peaks on heating and only a single peak on cooling. Curosurf on the other hand, presents calorimetric thermograms with only one peak in both the heating and cooling scans. This distinct thermotropic behavior between the two pulmonary surfactants, a consequence of their particular compositions, is associated with structural changes that were evaluated by simultaneous small- and wide-angle X-ray scattering experiments with in situ temperature variation. Interestingly, for temperatures below ∼35 °C for Curosurf and ∼53 °C for Survanta, the scattering data indicated the coexistence of two lamellar phases with different carbon chain organizations. For temperatures above these limits, the coexistence of phases disappears, giving rise to a fluid phase in both pulmonary surfactants, with multilamelar vesicles for Curosurf and unilamellar vesicles for Survanta. This process is quasi-reversible under cooling, and advanced data analysis for the scattering data indicated differences in the structural and elastic properties of the pulmonary surfactants. The detailed and systematic investigation shown in this work expands on the knowledge of the structure and thermodynamic behavior of Curosurf and Survanta, being relevant from both physiological and biophysical perspectives and also providing a basis for further studies on other types of pulmonary surfactants.
Zwitterionic micelles adsorb anions and several techniques were used to determine the specificity of this interaction. Although at a lower intensity, this adsorption can be compared to those observed in cationic micelles, which showed that interfacial dehydration is a fundamental property for the geometry and size of micelles. Because there is no information on the interfacial hydration of zwitterionic micelles, we used dielectric relaxation spectroscopy (DRS) together with molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to evaluate the importance of surface dehydration promoted by the binding of anions at the micellar interface (sodium bromide, sodium methanesulfonate, sodium trifluoroacetate, and sodium triflate) in N-dodecyl- N, N-dimethyl-3-ammonio-1-propanesulfonate (DPS) micelles. Our results, showing good agreement between DRS and MD simulations, strongly suggest that specific ion effects on zwitterionic micelles are unrelated to global changes in the interfacial hydration and depend on specific interactions of the headgroups with selected anions.
Specific ion effects in zwitterionic micelles, especially for anions, are evident in reaction kinetics, zeta potential, and critical micelle concentration measurements. However, anion adsorption to zwitterionic micelles does not produce significant changes in shape, aggregation number, or interfacial hydration. Here we used molecular dynamics simulation of systems containing sulfobetaine zwitterionic micelles of N-dodecyl-N,N-dimethyl-3-ammonio-1-propanesulfonate (DPS) and nine different salts to explore ion adsorption in terms of group dehydration. Our results, in line with those obtained for cationic micelles, showed that the adsorption degree of anions containing both hydrophobic and hydrophilic portions, i.e., hydrotropes, were correlated with the ion dehydration and were governed mainly by the hydrophobic portion dehydration upon adsorption.
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