Lacticin 3147 is a two-peptide lantibiotic produced by Lactococcus lactis in which both peptides, LtnA1 and LtnA2, interact synergistically to produce antibiotic activities in the nanomolar concentration range; the individual peptides possess marginal (LtnA1) or no activity (LtnA2). We analysed the molecular basis for the synergism and found the cell wall precursor lipid II to play a crucial role as a target molecule. Tryptophan fluorescence measurements identified LtnA1, which is structurally similar to the lantibiotic mersacidin, as the lipid II binding component. However, LtnA1 on its own was not able to substantially inhibit cell wall biosynthesis in vitro; for full inhibition, LtnA2 was necessary. Both peptides together caused rapid K(+) leakage from intact cells; in model membranes supplemented with lipid II, the formation of defined pores with a diameter of 0.6 nm was observed. We propose a mode of action model in which LtnA1 first interacts specifically with lipid II in the outer leaflet of the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane. The resulting lipid II:LtnA1 complex is then able to recruit LtnA2 which leads to a high-affinity, three-component complex and subsequently inhibition of cell wall biosynthesis combined with pore formation.
Antimicrobial peptides with alpha-helical structures and positive net charges are in the focus of interest with regard to the development of new antibiotic agents, in particular against Gram-negative bacteria. Interaction between seven polycationic alpha-helical CAP18-derived peptides and different types of artificial membranes composed of phosphatidylcholine or lipopolysaccharide of the Gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli were investigated using different biophysical techniques. Results obtained from fluorescence energy transfer spectroscopy with liposomes, monolayer measurements on a Langmuir trough, and electrophysiological measurements on planar reconstituted asymmetric bilayer membranes including the lipid matrix of the outer membrane of E. coli were correlated, and these data were, furthermore, correlated with structural parameters of the peptides (net charge, alpha-helical content, hydrophobic moment, and hydrophobicity). All peptides induced current fluctuations in planar membranes due to the formation of transient lesions above a peptide- and lipid-specific minimal clamp voltage. Antibacterial activity was exhibited only by those peptides that induced lesion formation in the reconstituted outer membrane at clamp voltages below the transmembrane potential of the natural membrane. Thus, we propose that the physicochemical properties of both the peptides as well as of the target membranes are important for antibacterial activity.
Defensins represent a major component of innate host defense against bacteria, fungi, and enveloped viruses. One potent defensin found, e.g., in epithelia, is the polycationic human beta-defensin-3 (hBD3). We investigated the role of the lipid matrix composition, and in particular the presence of negatively charged lipopolysaccharides (LPS) from sensitive (Escherichia coli, Salmonella enterica serovar Minnesota) or resistant (Proteus mirabilis) Gram-negative bacteria or of the zwitterionic phospholipids of human cells, in determining the action of polycationic hBD3 on the different membranes, and related to their biological activity. The main focus was directed on data derived from electrical measurements on a reconstitution system of the OM as a planar asymmetric bilayer composed on one side of LPS and on the other of a phospholipid mixture. Our results demonstrate that the antimicrobial activity and the absence of cytotoxicity can be explained by the lipid-specificity of the peptide. A clear correlation between these aspects of the biological activity of hBD3 and its interaction with lipid matrices could be found. In particular, hBD3 could only induce lesions in those membranes resembling the lipid composition of the OM of sensitive bacterial strains. The permeation through the membrane is a decisive first step for the biological activity of many antimicrobial peptides. Therefore, we propose that the lipid-specificity of hBD3 as well as some other membrane-active antimicrobial peptides is important for their activity against bacteria or mammalian cells.
The lipid matrix of the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria is an asymmetric bilayer composed of a phospholipid inner leaflet and a lipopolysaccharide outer leaflet. Incorporated into this lipid matrix are, among other macromolecules, the porins, which have a sieve-like function for the transport or exclusion of hydrophilic substances. It is known that a reduced amount of porins is found in the outer membrane of rough mutants as compared with wild-type bacteria. This observation was discussed to be caused by a reduced number of insertion sites in the former. We performed electrical measurements on reconstituted planar bilayers composed of lipopolysaccharide on one side and a phospholipid mixture on the other side using lipopolysaccharide from various rough mutant strains of Salmonella enterica serovar Minnesota. We found that pore formation by PhoE trimers that were added to the phospholipid side of the bilayers increased with the increasing length of the lipopolysaccharide core sugar moiety. These results allow us to conclude that the length of the sugar moiety of lipopolysaccharide is the parameter governing pore formation and that no particular insertion sites are required. Furthermore, we found that the voltage gating of the porin channels is strongly dependent on the composition of the lipid matrix.The cell envelope of Gram-negative bacteria consists of the cytoplasmic membrane, the peptidoglycan layer, and an additional barrier, the outer membrane (OM), 1 (1) which is strictly asymmetric with respect to its lipid composition. Whereas the inner membrane (IM) is composed on both sides of phospholipids, the OM consists of a phospholipid inner leaflet and a lipopolysaccharide (LPS) outer leaflet. The LPS consists of an oligo-or polysaccharide portion covalently linked to a lipid component termed lipid A, which anchors the molecule in the membrane (2). In wild-type strains, the polysaccharide portion consists of an O-specific chain and the core oligosaccharide. Rough mutant strains do not express the O-specific chain, but retain core oligosaccharides of varying length. The LPS of various rough mutants are characterized by chemotypes in a sequence of decreasing length of the core sugar as Ra (complete core), Rb, Rc, Rd, and Re. Deep-rough LPS (Re LPS) represents the minimal structure of LPS consisting of only lipid A and two 3-deoxy-D-manno-oct-2-ulosonic acid (Kdo) monosaccharides (3) (Fig. 1).The OM protects the cell from harmful agents like antibiotics and toxins and against changes in osmotic pressure. Transmembrane proteins, the porins, allowing the uptake and disposal of small hydrophilic compounds such as nutrients and waste products (4), are assembled in the OM. In Escherichia coli OmpF and OmpC represent the general diffusion pores. The phosphoporin PhoE is synthesized when cells are grown under phosphate limitation (5). PhoE has a molecular weight of M r 36,822 and an exclusion size of M r ϳ600 and is weakly anion selective (6). The crystal structure of PhoE has been solved (7). The channel-formin...
The architecture of the lipid matrix of the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria is extremely asymmetric: Whereas the inner leaflet is composed of a phospholipid mixture, the outer leaflet is built up by glycolipids. For most Gram-negative species, these glycolipids are lipopolysaccharides (LPS), for a few species, however, glycosphingolipids. We demonstrate experimental approaches for the reconstitution of these asymmetric membranes as (i) solid supported membranes prepared by the Langmuir-Blodgett technique, (ii) planar lipid bilayers prepared by the Montal-Mueller technique, and (iii) giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) prepared by the phase transfer method. The asymmetric GUVs (aGUVs) composed of LPS on one leaflet are shown for the first time. They are characterized with respect to their phase behavior, flipflop of lipids and their usability to investigate the interaction with membrane active peptides or proteins. For the antimicrobial peptide LL-32 and for the bacterial porin OmpF the specificity of the interaction with asymmetric membranes is shown. The three reconstitution systems are compared with respect to their usability to investigate domain formation and interactions with peptides and proteins.
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