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Mechanism of a prototypical synthetic membrane-active antimicrobial: Efficient hole-punching via interaction with negative intrinsic curvature lipids
- Source :
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 105:20595-20600
- Publication Year :
- 2008
- Publisher :
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008.
-
Abstract
- Phenylene ethynylenes comprise a prototypical class of synthetic antimicrobial compounds that mimic antimicrobial peptides produced by eukaryotes and have broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity. We show unambiguously that bacterial membrane permeation by these antimicrobials depends on the presence of negative intrinsic curvature lipids, such as phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) lipids, found in high concentrations within bacterial membranes. Plate-killing assays indicate that a PE-knockout mutant strain of Escherichia coli drastically out-survives the wild type against the membrane-active phenylene ethynylene antimicrobials, whereas the opposite is true when challenged with traditional metabolic antibiotics. That the PE deletion is a lethal mutation in normative environments suggests that resistant bacterial strains do not evolve because a lethal mutation is required to gain immunity. PE lipids allow efficient generation of negative curvature required for the circumferential barrel of an induced membrane pore; an inverted hexagonal H II phase, which consists of arrays of water channels, is induced by a small number of antimicrobial molecules. The estimated antimicrobial occupation in these water channels is nonlinear and jumps from ≈1 to 3 per 4 nm of induced water channel length as the global antimicrobial concentration is increased. By comparing to exactly solvable 1D spin models for magnetic systems, we quantify the cooperativity of these antimicrobials.
- Subjects :
- Cell Membrane Permeability
Mutant
Antimicrobial peptides
Synthetic membrane
Cooperativity
Biology
medicine.disease_cause
chemistry.chemical_compound
Anti-Infective Agents
Biomimetic Materials
Escherichia coli
medicine
Phosphatidylethanolamine
Multidisciplinary
Phosphatidylethanolamines
Cell Membrane
Membranes, Artificial
Antimicrobial
Membrane
chemistry
Biochemistry
Alkynes
Physical Sciences
Biophysics
Peptides
Ethers
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10916490 and 00278424
- Volume :
- 105
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7989b53c4e5106dc9d2ccb7a017242e9
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0806456105