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1.
Daptomycin is a lipopeptide antibiotic that binds to and depolarizes bacterial cell membranes. Its antibacterial activity requires calcium and correlates with the content of phosphatidylglycerol in the target membrane. Daptomycin has been shown to form oligomers on liposome membranes. We here use perylene excimer fluorescence to further characterize the membrane-associated oligomer. To this end, the N-terminal fatty acyl chain was replaced with perylene-butanoic acid. The perylene derivative retains one third of the antibacterial activity of native daptomycin. On liposomes containing phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylglycerol, as well as on Bacillus subtilis cells, the perylene-labeled daptomycin forms excimers, which shows that the N-terminal acyl chains of neighboring oligomer subunits are in immediate contact with one another. In a lipid bicelle system, oligomer formation can be titrated with stoichiometric amounts of phosphatidylglycerol. Therefore, the interaction of daptomycin with a single molecule of phosphatidylglycerol is sufficient to trigger daptomycin oligomerization.  相似文献   

2.
Daptomycin is a lipopeptide antibiotic that is used clinically to treat severe infections caused by Gram-positive bacteria. Its bactericidal action involves the calcium-dependent binding to membranes containing phosphatidylglycerol, followed by the formation of membrane-associated oligomers. Bacterial cells exposed to daptomycin undergo membrane depolarization, suggesting the formation of channels or pores in the target membranes. We here used a liposome model to detect and characterize the permeability properties of the daptomycin pores. The pores are selective for cations, with permeabilities being highest for Na+, K+, and other alkali metal ions. The permeability is approximately twice lower for Mg++, and lower again for the organic cations choline and hexamethonium. Anions are excluded, as is the zwitterion cysteine. These observations account for the observed depolarization of bacterial cells by daptomycin and suggest that under typical in vivo conditions depolarization is mainly due to sodium influx.  相似文献   

3.
Daptomycin is a lipopeptide antibiotic that kills Gram-positive bacteria by membrane depolarization. While it has long been assumed that the mode of action of daptomycin involves the formation of membrane-associated oligomers, this has so far not been experimentally demonstrated. We here use FRET between native daptomycin and an NBD-labeled daptomycin derivative to show that such oligomerization indeed occurs. The oligomers are observed in the presence of calcium ions on membrane vesicles isolated from Bacillus subtilis, as well as on model membranes containing the negatively charged phospholipid phosphatidylglycerol. In contrast, oligomerization does not occur on membranes containing phosphatidylcholine only, nor in solution at micromolar daptomycin concentrations. The requirements for oligomerization of daptomycin resemble those previously reported for antibacterial activity, suggesting that oligomerization is necessary for the activity.  相似文献   

4.
Shift of Pseudomonas fluorescens NCMB 129 from a phosphate rich into a phosphate limited medium results in a reduction of the membrane phospholipids phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol and cardiolipin. Concomitantly a positively charged ornithine amide lipid is synthesized. The gradual increase of this lipid is paralleled by an increasing resistance to polymyxin B. The binding capacities of intact cells, and isolated inner and outer membranes for the antibiotic are reduced in the resistant organisms. It is discussed that the observed effect could be circumstantial evidence that the positively charged polymyxin B needs negatively charged receptors in biological membranes in order to exert its antibiotic activity.List of Abbreviations PE phosphatidylethanolamine - PG phosphatidylglycerol - CL cardiolipin - PX polymyxin B  相似文献   

5.
Daptomycin is a cyclic lipopeptide effective against multidrug Gram-positive bacteria. Despite having a net negative charge, it is selective against negatively charged bacterial membranes. It has been established that daptomycin's antibiotic activity is based on directly targeting the bacterial membranes and that this antibacterial activity depends on calcium ions. Importantly, however, both the precise role of ions and the physical mechanisms responsible for daptomycin's action remain poorly understood. We investigate these issues using three types of molecular dynamics simulations: umbrella sampling free energy calculations for a single daptomycin, unbiased simulations for daptomycin tetramers, and unbiased simulations of micellation of daptomycin both in the absence and presence of calcium ions. The simulations are in the excess of 4 μs. As the most important finding, we establish that binding of the calcium ions on the aspartic acid residues is the key to stabilizing daptomycin tetramers inside the model material membrane. These complexes are vital for daptomycin's antibacterial activity. In the absence of binding, the tetramer is not stable and moves slowly out of the membrane. We also demonstrate that in solution, micellation of daptomycin occurs both in the presence and absence of calcium ions, and discuss the similarities between the behaviors of daptomycin and amyloid peptides in membranes.  相似文献   

6.
Many bacterial pathogens achieve resistance to defensin-like cationic antimicrobial peptides (CAMPs) by the multiple peptide resistance factor (MprF) protein. MprF plays a crucial role in Staphylococcus aureus virulence and it is involved in resistance to the CAMP-like antibiotic daptomycin. MprF is a large membrane protein that modifies the anionic phospholipid phosphatidylglycerol with l-lysine, thereby diminishing the bacterial affinity for CAMPs. Its widespread occurrence recommends MprF as a target for novel antimicrobials, although the mode of action of MprF has remained incompletely understood. We demonstrate that the hydrophilic C-terminal domain and six of the fourteen proposed trans-membrane segments of MprF are sufficient for full-level lysyl-phosphatidylglycerol (Lys-PG) production and that several conserved amino acid positions in MprF are indispensable for Lys-PG production. Notably, Lys-PG production did not lead to efficient CAMP resistance and most of the Lys-PG remained in the inner leaflet of the cytoplasmic membrane when the large N-terminal hydrophobic domain of MprF was absent, indicating a crucial role of this protein part. The N-terminal domain alone did not confer CAMP resistance or repulsion of the cationic test protein cytochrome c. However, when the N-terminal domain was coexpressed with the Lys-PG synthase domain either in one protein or as two separate proteins, full-level CAMP resistance was achieved. Moreover, only coexpression of the two domains led to efficient Lys-PG translocation to the outer leaflet of the membrane and to full-level cytochrome c repulsion, indicating that the N-terminal domain facilitates the flipping of Lys-PG. Thus, MprF represents a new class of lipid-biosynthetic enzymes with two separable functional domains that synthesize Lys-PG and facilitate Lys-PG translocation. Our study unravels crucial details on the molecular basis of an important bacterial immune evasion mechanism and it may help to employ MprF as a target for new anti-virulence drugs.  相似文献   

7.
The reconstruction of accurate yet simplified mimetic models of cell membranes is a very challenging goal of synthetic biology. To date, most of the research focuses on the development of eukaryotic cell membranes, while reconstitution of their prokaryotic counterparts has not been fully addressed, and the proposed models do not reflect well the complexity of bacterial cell envelopes. Here, we describe the reconstitution of biomimetic bacterial membranes with an increasing level of complexity, developed from binary and ternary lipid mixtures. Giant unilamellar vesicles composed of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE); PC and phosphatidylglycerol (PG); PE and PG; PE, PG and cardiolipin (CA) at varying molar ratios were successfully prepared by the electroformation method. Each of the proposed mimetic models focuses on reproducing specific membrane features such as membrane charge, curvature, leaflets asymmetry, or the presence of phase separation. GUVs were characterized in terms of size distribution, surface charge, and lateral organization. Finally, the developed models were tested against the lipopeptide antibiotic daptomycin. The obtained results showed a clear dependency of daptomycin binding efficiency on the amount of negatively charged lipid species present in the membrane. We anticipate that the models proposed here can be applied not only in antimicrobial testing but also serve as platforms for studying fundamental biological processes in bacteria as well as their interaction with physiologically relevant biomolecules.  相似文献   

8.
Daptomycin is a lipopeptide antibiotic produced by the soil bacterium Streptomyces roseosporus that is clinically used to treat severe infections with Gram-positive bacteria. In this review, we discuss the mode of action of this important antibiotic. Although daptomycin is structurally related to amphomycin and similar lipopeptides that inhibit peptidoglycan biosynthesis, experimental studies have not produced clear evidence that daptomycin shares their action mechanism. Instead, the best characterized effect of daptomycin is the permeabilization and depolarization of the bacterial cell membrane. This activity, which can account for daptomycin’s bactericidal effect, correlates with the level of phosphatidylglycerol (PG) in the membrane. Accordingly, reduced synthesis of PG or its increased conversion to lysyl-PG promotes bacterial resistance to daptomycin. While other resistance mechanisms suggest that daptomycin may indeed directly interfere with cell wall synthesis or cell division, such effects still await direct experimental confirmation. Daptomycin’s complex structure and biosynthesis have hampered the analysis of its structure activity relationships. Novel methods of total synthesis, including a recent one that is carried out entirely on a solid phase, will enable a more thorough and systematic exploration of the sequence space.  相似文献   

9.
Lysophospholipid transporter (LplT) was previously found to be primarily involved in 2-acyl lysophosphatidylethanolamine (lyso-PE) recycling in Gram-negative bacteria. This work identifies the potent role of LplT in maintaining membrane stability and integrity in the Escherichia coli envelope. Here we demonstrate the involvement of LplT in the recycling of three major bacterial phospholipids using a combination of an in vitro lysophospholipid binding assay using purified protein and transport assays with E. coli spheroplasts. Our results show that lyso-PE and lysophosphatidylglycerol, but not lysophosphatidylcholine, are taken up by LplT for reacylation by acyltransferase/acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase on the inner leaflet of the membrane. We also found a novel cardiolipin hydrolysis reaction by phospholipase A2 to form diacylated cardiolipin progressing to the completely deacylated headgroup. These two distinct cardiolipin derivatives were both translocated with comparable efficiency to generate triacylated cardiolipin by acyltransferase/acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase, demonstrating the first evidence of cardiolipin remodeling in bacteria. These findings support that a fatty acid chain is not required for LplT transport. We found that LplT cannot transport lysophosphatidic acid, and its substrate binding was not inhibited by either orthophosphate or glycerol 3-phosphate, indicating that either a glycerol or ethanolamine headgroup is the chemical determinant for substrate recognition. Diacyl forms of PE, phosphatidylglycerol, or the tetra-acylated form of cardiolipin could not serve as a competitive inhibitor in vitro. Based on an evolutionary structural model, we propose a “sideways sliding” mechanism to explain how a conserved membrane-embedded α-helical interface excludes diacylphospholipids from the LplT binding site to facilitate efficient flipping of lysophospholipid across the cell membrane.  相似文献   

10.
Translocation of preproteins across the Escherichia coli inner membrane requires acidic phospholipids. We have studied the translocation of the precursor protein proOmpA across inverted inner membrane vesicles prepared from cells depleted of phosphatidylglycerol and cardiolipin. These membranes support neither translocation nor the translocation ATPase activity of the SecA subunit of preprotein translocase. We now report that inner membrane vesicles which are depleted of acidic phospholipids are unable to bind SecA protein with high affinity. These membranes can be restored to translocation competence by fusion with liposomes containing phosphatidylglycerol, suggesting that the defect in SecA binding is a direct effect of phospholipid depletion rather than a general derangement of inner membrane structure. Reconstitution of SecY/E, the membrane-embedded domain of translocase, into proteoliposomes containing predominantly a single synthetic acidic lipid, dioleoylphosphatidylglycerol, allows efficient catalysis of preprotein translocation.  相似文献   

11.
Membrane phospholipid composition of Caulobacter crescentus.   总被引:28,自引:18,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
The phospholipid composition of Caulobacter crescentus CB13 and CB15 was determined. The acidic phospholipids, phosphatidylglycerol and cardiolipin, comprise approximately 87% of the total phospholipids. Neither phosphatidylethanolamine nor its precursor phosphatidylserine was detected. The outer and inner membranes of C. crescentus CB13 were separated, and phospholipid analysis revealed heterogeneity with respect to the relative amounts of phosphatidylglycerol and cardiolipin in the two membranes. As has been shown to be the case for other bacterial membranes, the concentration of cardiolipin increases and phosphatidylglycerol decreases as cell cultures enter stationary phase.  相似文献   

12.
Bacteria are frequently exposed to cationic antimicrobial peptides (CAMPs) from eukaryotic hosts (host defence peptides) or from prokaryotic competitors (bacteriocins). However, many bacteria, among them most of the major human pathogens, achieve CAMP resistance by MprF, a unique enzyme that modifies anionic phospholipids with l-lysine or l-alanine thereby introducing positive charges into the membrane surface and reducing the affinity for CAMPs. The lysyl or alanyl groups are derived from aminoacyl tRNAs and are usually transferred to phosphatidylglycerol (PG). Recent studies with MprF from Staphylococcus aureus demonstrated that production of Lys-PG only leads to CAMP resistance when an additional flippase domain of MprF is present that translocates Lys-PG and exposes it at the outer leaflet of the membrane. Thus, MprF exerts two specific functions that have hardly been found in other bacterial proteins. MprF proteins are crucial virulence factors of many human pathogens, which recommends them as targets for new anti-virulence drugs. Intriguingly, specific point mutations in mprF cause resistance to the CAMP-like antibiotic daptomycin in a yet unclear way that may involve altered Lys-PG synthesis and/or Lys-PG flipping capacities. Thus, a thorough characterization of MprF domains and functions will help to unravel how bacteria maintain and protect their cytoplasmic membranes.  相似文献   

13.
Cecropin D is an antimicrobial peptide from Bombyx mori displaying anticancer and pro-apoptotic activities and, together with Cecropin XJ and Cecropin A, one of the very few peptides targeting esophageal cancer. Cecropin D displays poor similarity to other cecropins but a remarkable similarity in the structure and activity spectrum with Cecropin A and Cecropin XJ, offering the possibility to highlight key motifs at the base of the biological activity. In this work we show by NMR and MD simulations that Cecropin D is partially structured in solution and stabilizes its two-helix folding upon interaction with biomimetic membranes. Simulations show that Cecropin D strongly interacts with the surface of cancer cell biomimetic bilayers where it recognises the phosphatidylserine headgroup often exposed in the outer leaflet of cancerous cells by means of specific salt bridges. Cecropin D is also able to penetrate deeply in bilayers containing cardiolipin, a phospholipid found in mitochondria, causing significant destabilization in the lipid packing which might account for its pro-apoptotic activity. In bacterial membranes, phosphatidylglycerol and phosphatidylethanolamine act synergically by electrostatically attracting cecropin D and providing access to the membrane core, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
The bacterial cell membrane accomplishes the controlled exchange of molecules with the extracellular space and mediates specific interactions with the environment. However, the cytoplasmic membrane also includes vulnerable targets for antimicrobial agents. A common feature of cationic antimicrobial peptides (CAMPs) produced by other bacteria or by the host immune system is to utilize the negative charge of bacterial phospholipids such as phosphatidylglycerol (PG) or cardiolipin (CL) for initial adherence and subsequent penetration into the membrane bilayer. To resist cationic antimicrobials many bacteria integrate positive charges into the membrane surface. This is accomplished by aminoacylation of negatively charged (PG) or (CL) with alanine, arginine, or lysine residues. The Multiple Peptide Resistance Factor (MprF) of Staphylococcus aureus is the prototype of a highly conserved protein family of aminoacyl phosphatidylglycerol synthases (aaPGSs) which modify PG or CL with amino acids. MprF is an oligomerizing membrane protein responsible for both, synthesis of lysyl phosphatidylglycerol (LysPG) in the inner leaflet of the cytoplasmic membrane and translocation of LysPG to the outer leaflet. This review focuses on occurrence, synthesis and function of bacterial aminoacyl phospholipids (aaPLs) and on the role of such lipids in basic cellular processes and pathogenicity. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Bacterial Lipids edited by Russell E. Bishop.  相似文献   

15.
Antimicrobial resistance is currently an important public health issue. The need for innovative antimicrobials is therefore growing. The ideal antimicrobial compound should limit antimicrobial resistance. Antimicrobial peptides or proteins such as hen egg white lysozyme are promising molecules that act on bacterial membranes. Hen egg white lysozyme has recently been identified as active on Gram-negative bacteria due to disruption of the outer and cytoplasmic membrane integrity. Furthermore, dry-heating (7 days and 80 °C) improves the membrane activity of lysozyme, resulting in higher antimicrobial activity. These in vivo findings suggest interactions between lysozyme and membrane lipids. This is consistent with the findings of several other authors who have shown lysozyme interaction with bacterial phospholipids such as phosphatidylglycerol and cardiolipin. However, until now, the interaction between lysozyme and bacterial cytoplasmic phospholipids has been in need of clarification. This study proposes the use of monolayer models with a realistic bacterial phospholipid composition in physiological conditions. The lysozyme/phospholipid interactions have been studied by surface pressure measurements, ellipsometry and atomic force microscopy. Native lysozyme has proved able to absorb and insert into a bacterial phospholipid monolayer, resulting in lipid packing reorganization, which in turn has lead to lateral cohesion modifications between phospholipids. Dry-heating of lysozyme has increased insertion capacity and ability to induce lipid packing modifications. These in vitro findings are then consistent with the increased membrane disruption potential of dry heated lysozyme in vivo compared to native lysozyme. Moreover, an eggPC monolayer study suggested that lysozyme/phospholipid interactions are specific to bacterial cytoplasmic membranes.  相似文献   

16.
Diphtheria toxin forms pores in biological and model membranes upon exposure to low pH. These pores may play a critical role in the translocation of the A chain of the toxin into the cytoplasm. The effect of protein concentration on diphtheria toxin pore formation in model membrane systems was assayed by using a new fluorescence quenching method. In this method, the movement of Cascade Blue labeled dextrans of various sizes across membranes is detected by antibodies which quench Cascade Blue fluorescence. It was found that at low pH the toxin makes pores in phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylglycerol vesicles with a size that depends on protein concentration. At the lowest toxin concentrations only the entrapped free fluorophore (MW 538) could be released from model membranes. At intermediate toxin concentrations, a 3 kD dextran could be released. At the highest toxin concentration, a 10 kD dextran could be released, but not a 70 kD dextran. Similar pore properties were found using vesicles lacking phosphatidylglycerol or containing 30% cholesterol. However, larger pores formed at lower protein concentrations in the presence of cholesterol. The dependence of pore size on toxin concentration suggests that toxin oligomerization regulates pore size. This behavior may explain some of the conflicting data on the size of the pores formed by diphtheria toxin. The formation of oligomers by membrane-inserted toxin is consistent with the results of chemical crosslinking and measurements of the self-quenching of rhodamine-labeled toxin. Based on these experiments we propose diphtheria toxin forms oligomers with a variable stoichiometry, and that pore size depends on the oligomerization state. Reasons why oligomerization could assist proper membrane insertion of the toxin and other proteins that convert from soluble to membrane-inserted states are discussed. Received: 10 March 1999/Revised: 22 June 1999  相似文献   

17.
We have previously demonstrated that the membranes of several bacteriophages contain more phosphatidylglycerol (PG) and less phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) than the host membrane from where they are derived. Here, we determined the transbilayer distribution of PG and PE in the membranes of bacteriophages PM2, PRD1, Bam35 and phi6 using selective modification of PG and PE in the outer membrane leaflet with sodium periodate or trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid, respectively. In phi6, the transbilayer distributions of PG, PE and cardiolipin could also be analyzed by selective hydrolysis of the lipids in the outer leaflet by phospholipase A2. We used electrospray ionization mass-spectrometry to determine the transbilayer distribution of phospholipid classes and individual molecular species. In each bacteriophage, PG was enriched in the outer membrane leaflet and PE in the inner one (except for Bam35). Only modest differences in the transbilayer distribution between different molecular species were observed. The effective shape and charge of the phospholipid molecules and lipid-protein interactions are likely to be most important factors driving the asymmetric distribution of phospholipids in the phage membranes. The results of this first systematic study on the phospholipid distribution in bacteriophage membranes will be very helpful when interpreting the accumulating high-resolution data on these organisms.  相似文献   

18.
Transbilayer distribution of phospholipids in bacteriophage membranes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have previously demonstrated that the membranes of several bacteriophages contain more phosphatidylglycerol (PG) and less phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) than the host membrane from where they are derived. Here, we determined the transbilayer distribution of PG and PE in the membranes of bacteriophages PM2, PRD1, Bam35 and phi6 using selective modification of PG and PE in the outer membrane leaflet with sodium periodate or trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid, respectively. In phi6, the transbilayer distributions of PG, PE and cardiolipin could also be analyzed by selective hydrolysis of the lipids in the outer leaflet by phospholipase A(2). We used electrospray ionization mass-spectrometry to determine the transbilayer distribution of phospholipid classes and individual molecular species. In each bacteriophage, PG was enriched in the outer membrane leaflet and PE in the inner one (except for Bam35). Only modest differences in the transbilayer distribution between different molecular species were observed. The effective shape and charge of the phospholipid molecules and lipid-protein interactions are likely to be most important factors driving the asymmetric distribution of phospholipids in the phage membranes. The results of this first systematic study on the phospholipid distribution in bacteriophage membranes will be very helpful when interpreting the accumulating high-resolution data on these organisms.  相似文献   

19.
The mechanism of cardiolipin (diphosphatidylglycerol) biosynthesis was examined in mitochondria and outer and inner mitochondrial membranes prepared from guinea pig and rat livers to determine whether this formation from phosphatidylglycerol was absolutely dependent on cytidinediphosphodiglyceride, as previously reported for intact mitochondria. Experimental results confirmed that the biosynthesis of cardiolipin, from the membrane-bound radioactive phosphatidylglycerol in intact mitochondria isolated from guinea pig and rat liver, was absolutely dependent on CDP-diglycerides and required the addition of divalent cations. Furthermore, the same mechanism for the biosynthesis of cardiolipin was operational in the outer and inner mitochondrial membranes. This biosynthesis was associated with both the outer and inner mitochondrial membranes prepared from guinea pig liver, but only with the inner mitochondrial membranes prepared from rat liver. The release of radioactive glycerol was also measured, but the amount obtained did not satisfy the stoichiometric requirement for CDP-diglyceride-independent biosynthesis of cardiolipin from 2 mol of phosphatidylglycerol with the liberation of 1 mol of glycerol. Therefore, it was concluded that this mechanism is not involved in the biosynthesis of cardiolipin in mitochondrial and submitochondrial membranes prepared from guinea pig and rat liver.  相似文献   

20.
We have studied the interaction of the polycationic peptide antibiotic polymyxin B (PMB) with asymmetric planar bilayer membranes via electrical measurements. The bilayers were of different compositions, including those of the lipid matrices of the outer membranes of various species of Gram-negative bacteria. One leaflet, representing the bacterial inner leaflet, consisted of a phospholipid mixture (PL; phosphatidylethanolamine, -glycerol, and diphosphatidylglycerol in a molar ratio of 81:17:2). The other (outer) leaflet consisted either of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from deep rough mutants of PMB-sensitive (Escherichia coli F515) or -resistant strains (Proteus mirabilis R45), glycosphingolipid (GSL-1) from Sphingomonas paucimobilis IAM 12576, or phospholipids (phosphatidylglycerol, diphytanoylphosphatidylcholine). In all membrane systems, the addition of PMB to the outer leaflet led to the induction of current fluctuations due to transient membrane lesions. The minimal PMB concentration required for the induction of the lesions and their size correlated with the charge of the lipid molecules. In the membrane system resembling the lipid matrix of a PMB-sensitive strain (F515 LPS/PL), the diameters of the lesions were large enough (d= 2.4 nm ± 8%) to allow PMB molecules to permeate (self-promoted transport), but in all other systems they were too small. A comparison of these phenomena with membrane effects induced by detergents (dodecyltriphenylphosphonium bromide, dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide, sodiumdodecylsulfate) revealed a detergent-like mechanism of the PMB-membrane interaction. Received: 16 September 1997/Revised: 25 November 1997  相似文献   

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