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1.
Lipid A structure at the air-aqueous interface has been studied using pressure-area isotherm methods coupled with the surface X-ray scattering techniques of X-ray reflectivity (XR) and grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD). Lipid A monolayers were formed at the air-aqueous interface to represent the lipid moiety of the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. Lipid A structure was characterized at surface pressures between 10 and 35 mN/m. Interactions of α-helical antimicrobial peptides LL-37, SMAP-29 and D2A22 with lipid A monolayers were subsequently studied. Although insertion into the lipid A monolayers was observed with the α-helical peptides, little change was seen from the X-ray data, suggesting that the lipid A hydrocarbon chains are involved in reorientation during insertion and that the hydrocarbon chains have a relatively rigid structure.  相似文献   

2.
Planar systems - monolayers and films - constitute a useful platform for studying membrane-active peptides. Here, we summarize varied approaches for studying peptide organization and peptide-lipid interactions at the air/water interface, and focus on three representative antimicrobial membrane-associated peptides—alamethicin, gramicidin, and valinomycin. Experimental data, specifically surface pressure/area isotherms and Brewster angle microscopy images, provided information on peptide association and the effects of the lipid monolayers on peptide surface organization. In general, film analysis emphasized the effects of lipid layers in promoting peptide association and aggregation at the air/water interface. Importantly, the data demonstrated that in many cases peptide domains are phase-separated within the phospholipid monolayers, suggesting that this behavior contributes to the biological actions of membrane-active antimicrobial peptides.  相似文献   

3.
Hydrophobic interactions govern specificity for natural antimicrobial peptides. No such relationship has been established for synthetic peptoids that mimic antimicrobial peptides. Peptoid macrocycles synthesized with five different aromatic groups are investigated by minimum inhibitory and hemolytic concentration assays, epifluorescence microscopy, atomic force microscopy, and X-ray reflectivity. Peptoid hydrophobicity is determined using high performance liquid chromatography. Disruption of bacterial but not eukaryotic lipid membranes is demonstrated on the solid supported lipid bilayers and Langmuir monolayers. X-ray reflectivity studies demonstrate that intercalation of peptoids with zwitterionic or negatively charged lipid membranes is found to be regulated by hydrophobicity. Critical levels of peptoid selectivity are demonstrated and found to be modulated by their hydrophobic groups. It is suggested that peptoids may follow different optimization schemes as compared to their natural analogues.  相似文献   

4.
This article addresses the interactions of the synthetic antimicrobial peptide dermaseptin 01 (GLWSTIKQKGKEAAIAAA‐ KAAGQAALGAL‐NH2, DS 01) with phospholipid (PL) monolayers comprising (i) a lipid‐rich extract of Leishmania amazonensis (LRE‐La), (ii) zwitterionic PL (dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, DPPC), and (iii) negatively charged PL (dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol, DPPG). The degree of interaction of DS 01 with the different biomembrane models was quantified from equilibrium and dynamic liquid‐air interface parameters. At low peptide concentrations, interactions between DS 01 and zwitterionic PL, as well as with the LRE‐La monolayers were very weak, whereas with negatively charged PLs the interactions were stronger. For peptide concentrations above 1 µg/ml, a considerable expansion of negatively charged monolayers occurred. In the case of DPPC, it was possible to return to the original lipid area in the condensed phase, suggesting that the peptide was expelled from the monolayer. However, in the case of DPPG, the average area per lipid molecule in the presence of DS 01 was higher than pure PLs even at high surface pressures, suggesting that at least part of DS 01 remained incorporated in the monolayer. For the LRE‐La monolayers, DS 01 also remained in the monolayer. This is the first report on the antiparasitic activity of AMPs using Langmuir monolayers of a natural lipid extract from L. amazonensis. Copyright © 2011 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

5.
Antimicrobial peptides or their synthetic mimics are a promising class of potential new antibiotics. Herein we assess the effect of the type of cationic side chain (i.e., guanidino vs. amino groups) on the membrane perturbing mechanism of antimicrobial α-peptide–β-peptoid chimeras. Langmuir monolayers composed of 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) were used to model cytoplasmic membranes of both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, while lipopolysaccharide Kdo2-lipid A monolayers were mimicking the outer membrane of Gram-negative species. We report the results of the measurements using an array of techniques, including high-resolution synchrotron surface X-ray scattering, epifluorescence microscopy, and in vitro antimicrobial activity to study the molecular mechanisms of peptidomimetic interaction with bacterial membranes. We found guanidino group-containing chimeras to exhibit greater disruptive activity on DPPG monolayers than the amino group-containing analogues. However, this effect was not observed for lipopolysaccharide monolayers where the difference was negligible. Furthermore, the addition of the nitrobenzoxadiazole fluorophore did not reduce the insertion activity of these antimicrobials into both model membrane systems examined, which may be useful for future cellular localization studies.  相似文献   

6.
The interaction of DNA with monolayers of the cationic lipid dimethyldioctadecylammonium bromide, with/without 50 mol % of a neutral "helper" lipid, either dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine or cholesterol, has been studied using specular neutron reflection, surface pressure-area isotherms, and Brewster angle microscopy. The amount of DNA bound to the lipid head groups has been comprehensively quantified in the range of 8-39 vol% of DNA with respect to the monolayer composition (monolayers composed of dimethyldioctadecylammonium bromide binding the most DNA and monolayers containing dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine binding the least) and surface pressure (DNA binding being greatest at highest surface pressures). Surprisingly, regardless of these variables, the thickness of the DNA-containing layer remained approximately constant between 18 and 25 ?. This systematic study is the first direct quantification of the binding of DNA with two different helper-lipid-containing multicomponent monolayers, an important step toward understanding interaction parameters in more realistic models of gene delivery systems.  相似文献   

7.
Planar systems--monolayers and films--constitute a useful platform for studying membrane-active peptides. Here, we summarize varied approaches for studying peptide organization and peptide-lipid interactions at the air/water interface, and focus on three representative antimicrobial membrane--associated peptides-alamethicin, gramicidin, and valinomycin. Experimental data, specifically surface pressure/area isotherms and Brewster angle microscopy images, provided information on peptide association and the effects of the lipid monolayers on peptide surface organization. In general, film analysis emphasized the effects of lipid layers in promoting peptide association and aggregation at the air/water interface. Importantly, the data demonstrated that in many cases peptide domains are phase-separated within the phospholipid monolayers, suggesting that this behavior contributes to the biological actions of membrane-active antimicrobial peptides.  相似文献   

8.
A peptide antibiotic, gramicidin A, was covalently bound to cystamine self-assembled monolayers on gold surfaces. Each step of the surface functionalization was characterized by polarization modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The antimicrobial activity of the anchored gramicidin was tested against three Gram-positive bacteria (Listeria ivanovii, Enterococcus faecalis, and Staphylococcus aureus), the Gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli and the yeast Candida albicans. The results revealed that the adsorbed gramicidin reduced, from 60% for E. coli to 90% for C. albicans, the number of culturable microorganisms attached to the surface. The activity was proven to be persistent overtime, up to 6 months after the first use. The bacteria attached to the functionalized surfaces were permeabilized as shown by confocal microscopy. Taken together, these results indicate a bacteriostatic mode of action of the immobilized peptide. Finally, using green fluorescent protein-expressing bacteria, it was shown that the development of a bacterial biofilm was delayed on peptide-grafted surfaces for at least 24 h.  相似文献   

9.
Interaction of the human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 with lipid monolayers has been investigated by a range of complementary techniques including pressure-area isotherms, insertion assay, epifluorescence microscopy, and synchrotron x-ray scattering, to analyze its mechanism of action. Lipid monolayers were formed at the air-liquid interface to mimic the surface of the bacterial cell wall and the outer leaflet of erythrocyte cell membrane by using phosphatidylglycerol (DPPG), phosphatidylcholine (DPPC), and phosphatidylethanolamine (DPPE) lipids. LL-37 is found to readily insert into DPPG monolayers, disrupting their structure and thus indicating bactericidal action. In contrast, DPPC and DPPE monolayers remained virtually unaffected by LL-37, demonstrating its nonhemolytic activity and lipid discrimination. Specular x-ray reflectivity data yielded considerable differences in layer thickness and electron-density profile after addition of the peptide to DPPG monolayers, but little change was seen after peptide injection when probing monolayers composed of DPPC and DPPE. Grazing incidence x-ray diffraction demonstrated significant peptide insertion and lateral packing order disruption of the DPPG monolayer by LL-37 insertion. Epifluorescence microscopy data support these findings.  相似文献   

10.
We have studied how membrane interactions of two synthetic cationic antimicrobial peptides with alternating α- and β-amino acid residues (“α/β-peptides”) impact toxicity to different prokaryotes. Electron microscopic examination of thin sections of Escherichia coli and of Bacillus subtilis exposed to these two α/β-peptides reveals different structural changes in the membranes of these bacteria. These two peptides also have very different effects on the morphology of liposomes composed of phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylglycerol in a 2:1 molar ratio. Freeze fracture electron microscopy indicates that with this lipid mixture, α/β-peptide I induces the formation of a sponge phase. 31P NMR and X-ray diffraction are consistent with this conclusion. In contrast, with α/β-peptide II and this same lipid mixture, a lamellar phase is maintained, but with a drastically reduced d-spacing. α/β-Peptide II is more lytic to liposomes composed of these lipids than is I. These findings are consistent with the greater toxicity of α/β-peptide II, relative to α/β-peptide I, to E. coli, a bacterium having a high content of phosphatidylethanolamine. In contrast, both α/β-peptides display similar toxicity toward B. subtilis, in accord with the greater anionic lipid composition in its membrane. This work shows that variations in the selectivity of these peptidic antimicrobial peptides toward different strains of bacteria can be partly determined by the lipid composition of the bacterial cell membrane.  相似文献   

11.
Monolayers of a functional pulmonary surfactant (PS) can reach very low surface tensions well below their equilibrium value. The mechanism by which PS monolayers reach such low surface tensions and maintain film stability remains unknown. As shown previously by fluorescence microscopy, phospholipid phase transition and separation seem to be important for the normal biophysical properties of PS. This work studied phospholipid phase transitions and separations in monolayers of bovine lipid extract surfactant using atomic force microscopy. Atomic force microscopy showed phospholipid phase separation on film compression and a monolayer-to-multilayer transition at surface pressure 40-50 mN/m. The tilted-condensed phase consisted of domains not only on the micrometer scale, as detected previously by fluorescence microscopy, but also on the nanometer scale, which is below the resolution limits of conventional optical methods. The nanodomains were embedded uniformly within the liquid-expanded phase. On compression, the microdomains broke up into nanodomains, thereby appearing to contribute to tilted-condensed and liquid-expanded phase remixing. Addition of surfactant protein A altered primarily the nanodomains and promoted the formation of multilayers. We conclude that the nanodomains play a predominant role in affecting the biophysical properties of PS monolayers and the monolayer-to-multilayer transition.  相似文献   

12.
A systematic study of the lipid-layer two-dimensional crystallization technique has been carried out on the system composed of cholera toxin B-subunit and monosialoganglioside GM1, by electron microscopy, image analysis, and lipid film surface pressure measurements. Concentrations of protein and lipid components required for two-dimensional crystallization of toxin-GM1 complexes have been determined. Crystals were only obtained in the presence of mixed lipid films, composed of GM1 and of unsaturated lipids, such as dioleoylphosphatidylcholine or dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine, in agreement with a previous report [D. S. Ludwig et al., (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 83, 8585–8588]. Crystals were obtained with cholera toxin B-subunit concentration as low as 5 μg/ml, as well as in the presence of protein contaminants. They were obtained over a wide range of concentrations of both GM1 and unsaturated lipids. The minimal lipid amount needed for crystallization corresponded to a lipid monolayer at, or near, the maximal spreading pressure (50 mN/m). The use of an excess of lipid resulted in a stabilization of lipid monolayers and in a higher reproducibility or crystallization experiments.  相似文献   

13.
Halocidin was isolated from hemocytes, Halocynthia aurantium as a heterodimeric peptide consisting of two α-helical subunits, Hal15 and Hal18. Hal18 was shown to have antibacterial properties against Bacillus subtilis (MLC = 15 μM) and Escherichia coli (MLC = 100 μM). The peptide was shown to produce stable monolayers, which were characteristic of α-helical peptides predicted to orientate parallel to the surface of the interface. Constant area assays showed that Hal18 was surface active (4 μM) inducing surface pressure changes >30 mN m−1 characteristic of membrane interactive peptides. The peptide induced stable surface pressure changes in monolayers that were mimetic of B. subtilis membranes (circa 7 mN m−1) and E. coli membrane-mimics (circa 4 mN m−1). Hal18 inserted readily into zwitterionic DOPE and anionic DOPG monolayers inducing surface pressure changes circa 8 mN m−1 in both cases, providing evidence that interaction is not headgroup specific. Thermodynamic analysis of compression isotherms showed that the presence of Hal18 destabilised B. subtilis membranes (ΔG Mix > 0), which is in contrast to its stabilising effect on E. coli lipid extract implying the differential antimicrobial efficacy may be driven by lipid packing.  相似文献   

14.
The morphology of monolayers prepared from ternary lipid mixtures that have coexisting fluid phases has been examined by atomic force microscopy for samples transferred to mica before and after exposure to air. Mixtures of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and cholesterol with either egg sphingomyelin or 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine were studied at several surface pressures. Both lipid mixtures have a combination of small islands and large microdomains at low surface pressure (5-10 mN/m) for monolayers deposited in either air or nitrogen. By contrast, monolayers have small interconnected nanodomains when deposited under nitrogen at 30 mN/m but mixtures of large microdomains and small nanodomains when transferred after exposure to air. These results are consistent with an earlier report that concluded that the formation of large domains at high surface pressures (>30 mN/m) for monolayers exposed to air is caused by lipid oxidation. However, the higher spatial resolution available with atomic force microscopy indicates that exposure of the monolayers to air leads to an increase in the size of preexisting nanodomains, rather than a change in the miscibility pressure. Examination of changes in surface morphology as a function of surface pressure demonstrate a gradual evolution in size and surface coverage for both nano- and microdomains, before formation of a network of interconnected nanodomains. Similar studies for binary mixtures in the absence of cholesterol indicate that lipid oxidation results in analogous changes in domain size for monolayers with coexisting gel and fluid phases. These results illustrate the importance of using techniques capable of probing the nanoscale organization of membranes.  相似文献   

15.
VP1, a putative alpha-helical antimicrobial peptide (alpha-AMP) inhibited growth of Bacillus subtilis and Escherichia coli at 500microM. The peptide induced stable surface pressure changes in monolayers formed from B. subtilis native lipid extract (circa 4.5mNm(-1)) but transient pressure changes in corresponding E. coli monolayers (circa 1.0mNm(-1)), which led to monolayer disintegration. Synthetic lipid monolayers mimetic of the extracts were used to generate compression isotherms. Thermodynamic analysis of B. subtilis isotherms indicated membrane stabilisation by VP1 (DeltaG(Mix)<0), via a mechanism dependent upon the phosphatidylglycerol to cardiolipin ratio. Corresponding analysis of E. coli isotherms indicated membrane destabilisation by the peptide (DeltaG(Mix)>0). Destabilisation correlated with PE levels present and appeared to involve a mechanism resembling those used by tilted peptides. These data emphasise that structure/function analysis of alpha-AMPs must consider not only their structural characteristics but also the lipid make-up of the target microbial membrane.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of a saponin-rich extract from rhizomes of Soapwort (Saponaria officinalis L) and four synthetic surfactants: sodium lauryl sulphate (SLS), sodium laureth sulphate (SLES), ammonium lauryl sulphate (ALS) and cocamidopropyl betaine (CAPB) on two model lipid monolayers is analyzed using surface pressure, surface dilatational rheology and fluorescence microscopy. The following monolayers were employed: dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/cholesterol mixture in a molar ratio of 7:3 (DPPC/CHOL) and Ceramide [AP]/stearic acid/cholesterol in a molar ratio of 14:14:10 (CER/SA/CHOL). They mimicked a general bilayer structure and an intercellular lipid mixture, respectively. Both lipid mixtures on Milli-Q water were first compressed to the initial surface pressure, Π0 = 30 mN/m and then the subphase was exchanged with the respective (bio)surfactant solution at 1% (w/w). All four synthetic surfactants behaved in a similar way: they increased surface pressure to about 40 mN/m and reduced the storage modulus of surface dilational surface rheology, E′, to the values close to zero. The corresponding fluorescence microscopy pictures confirmed that the lipids mimicking the stratum corneum components were almost completely removed by the synthetic surfactants under the present experimental conditions. The components of the Soapwort extract (SAP) increased surface pressure to significantly higher values than the synthetic surfactants, but even more spectacular increase was observed for the storage modulus of the SAP-penetrated lipid monolayers (up to E′= 715 mN/m).  相似文献   

17.
Isolated from the venom sac of solitary spider wasp, Anoplius samariensis, anoplin is the smallest linear α-helical antimicrobial peptide found naturally with broad spectrum activity against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, and little hemolytic activity toward human erythrocytes. Deamidation was found to decrease the peptide's antibacterial properties. In the present work, interactions of amidated (Ano-NH2) and deamidated (Ano-OH) forms of anoplin as well as Ano-NH2 composed of all D-amino acids (D-Ano-NH2) with model cell membranes were investigated by means of Langmuir Blodgett (LB) technique, atomic force microscopy (AFM), X-ray photoemission electron microscopy (X-PEEM) and carboxyfluorescein leakage assay in order to gain a better understanding of the effect of these peptide modifications on membrane binding and lytic properties. According to LB, all three peptides form stable monolayers at the air/water interface with Ano-NH2 occupying a slightly greater area per molecule than Ano-OH. All three forms of the peptide interact preferentially with anionic 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-rac-(1-glycerol)] (DPPG), rather than zwitterionic 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) lipid monolayer. Peptides form nanoscale clusters in zwitterionic but not in anionic monolayers. Finally, membrane lytic activity of all derivatives was found to depend strongly on membrane composition and lipid/peptide ratio. The results suggest that amidated forms of peptides are likely to possess higher membrane binding affinity due to the increased charge.  相似文献   

18.
The surface behavior of six different ether lipids from archaebacteria, based on condensation of glycerol or more complex polyols with two isoprenoid alcohols at 20 or 40 carbon atoms, was investigated in monolayers at the air-water interface.The compounds with no complex polar group (GD, GDGT, GDNT) form monolayers showing a reversible collapse at surface pressure as low as 22 dynes/cm. This collapse pressure decrease with temperature in such a way that the film tension remains constant. In condensed films, these molecules do not assume a completely upright position.Lipids with complex polar ends (HL, GLB, PLII) form films more stable to compression. Forcearea characteristics and surface moment values of HL monolayers are similar to those of analogous ester lipids with fatty acid chains. Monolayers of the two bipolar lipids, GLB and PLII, at room temperature present a more condensed state, probably due to the lateral cohesion between long alkyl chains, but a lower collapse pressure.For all bipolar lipids, the area expansion induced by temperature increase is larger than that of monopolar ones.Abbreviations GD Glycerol diether (2,3-di-O-phytanyl-sn-glycerol - GDGT Glycerol-dialkyl-glycerol tetraether - GDNT Glycerol-dialkyl-nonitol tetraether - GLB Glycolipid B - PLII Phospholipid II - HL Total lipid extract from Halobacterium halobium  相似文献   

19.
Interaction of cationic antimicrobial peptides with model membranes   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
A series of natural and synthetic cationic antimicrobial peptides from various structural classes, including alpha-helical, beta-sheet, extended, and cyclic, were examined for their ability to interact with model membranes, assessing penetration of phospholipid monolayers and induction of lipid flip-flop, membrane leakiness, and peptide translocation across the bilayer of large unilamellar liposomes, at a range of peptide/lipid ratios. All peptides were able to penetrate into monolayers made with negatively charged phospholipids, but only two interacted weakly with neutral lipids. Peptide-mediated lipid flip-flop generally occurred at peptide concentrations that were 3- to 5-fold lower than those causing leakage of calcein across the membrane, regardless of peptide structure. With the exception of two alpha-helical peptides V681(n) and V25(p,) the extent of peptide-induced calcein release from large unilamellar liposomes was generally low at peptide/lipid molar ratios below 1:50. Peptide translocation across bilayers was found to be higher for the beta-sheet peptide polyphemusin, intermediate for alpha-helical peptides, and low for extended peptides. Overall, whereas all studied cationic antimicrobial peptides interacted with membranes, they were quite heterogeneous in their impact on these membranes.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of oxidatively modified phospholipids on the association with model biomembranes of four antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), temporin B and L, indolicidin, and LL-37(F27W) were studied by Langmuir balance and fluorescence spectroscopy. In keeping with previous reports the negatively charged phospholipid phosphatidylglycerol (PG) enhanced the intercalation of all four peptides into lipid monolayers and liposomal bilayers under low ionic strength conditions. Interestingly, similar effect was observed for 1-palmitoyl-2-(9′-oxo-nonanoyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (PoxnoPC), a zwitterionic oxidized phospholipid bearing an aldehyde function at the end of its truncated sn-2 acyl chain. Instead, the structurally similar 1-palmitoyl-2-azelaoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (PazePC) containing a carboxylic moiety was less efficient in promoting the membrane association of these peptides. Physiological saline reduced the binding of the above peptides to membranes containing PG, whereas interactions with PoxnoPC were found to be insensitive to ionic strength. Notably, membrane intercalation of temporin L, the most surface active of the above peptides could be into PoxnoPC containing monolayers was strongly attenuated by methoxyamine, suggesting the importance of Schiff base formation between peptide amino groups and the lipid aldehyde function. PoxnoPC and similar aldehyde bearing oxidatively modified phospholipids could represent novel molecular targets for AMPs.  相似文献   

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