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E. coli Cell Lysis Induced by Lys394 Enzyme Assisted by Magnetic Nanoparticles Exposed to Non-Heating Low-Frequency Magnetic Field

The spreading of microbial pathogens with more and more resistance to traditional low-molecular antibiotic agents demands new approaches to antibacterial therapy. The employment of bacteriophage enzymes capable of breaking bacterial cell walls has attracted much interest within this context. The spe...

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Autores principales: Usvaliev, Azizbek D., Belogurova, Natalia G., Pokholok, Konstantin V., Finko, Alexander V., Prusov, Andrey N., Golovin, Dmitry Yu., Miroshnikov, Konstantin A., Golovin, Yuri I., Klyachko, Natalia L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10384812/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37514057
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15071871
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author Usvaliev, Azizbek D.
Belogurova, Natalia G.
Pokholok, Konstantin V.
Finko, Alexander V.
Prusov, Andrey N.
Golovin, Dmitry Yu.
Miroshnikov, Konstantin A.
Golovin, Yuri I.
Klyachko, Natalia L.
author_facet Usvaliev, Azizbek D.
Belogurova, Natalia G.
Pokholok, Konstantin V.
Finko, Alexander V.
Prusov, Andrey N.
Golovin, Dmitry Yu.
Miroshnikov, Konstantin A.
Golovin, Yuri I.
Klyachko, Natalia L.
author_sort Usvaliev, Azizbek D.
collection PubMed
description The spreading of microbial pathogens with more and more resistance to traditional low-molecular antibiotic agents demands new approaches to antibacterial therapy. The employment of bacteriophage enzymes capable of breaking bacterial cell walls has attracted much interest within this context. The specific features of the morphology of Gram-negative bacteria prevent the effective direct usage of lytic enzymes and require assistance from additional helpers to facilitate cell lysis. The current work is devoted to the study of boosting the lysis of Escherichia coli (E. coli) JM 109 and MH 1 strains induced by Lys394 bacteriophage endolysin by means of rod-like (56 × 13 nm) magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) activated by a non-heating low-frequency magnetic field (LF MF) with a frequency of 50 Hz and a flux density of 68.5 mT in a pulse–pause mode (1 s on and 0.3 s off). According to theoretical assumptions, the mechanism of MNP assistance is presumably based upon the disordering of the outer membrane that facilitates enzyme permeation into peptidoglycans to its substrate. It is found that the effect of the LF MF reaches an almost a twofold acceleration of the enzyme reaction, resulting in almost 80 and 70%, respectively, of lysed E. coli JM 109 and MH 1 cells in 21 min. An increase in the membrane permeability was proven by two independent experiments employing β-lactamase periplasmic enzyme leakage and Nile Red (NR) hydrophobic dye fluorescence. It is shown that the outer membrane disordering of E. coli caused by exposure to LF MF nanoparticle movement leads to almost complete (more than 80%) β-lactamase release out of the cells’ periplasm to the buffer suspension. Experiments with NR (displaying fluorescence in a non-polar medium only) reveal a drastic reduction in NR fluorescence intensity, reaching a change of an order of magnitude when exposed to LF MF. The data obtained provide evidence of changes in the bacterial cell wall structure. The result shown open up the prospects of non-heating LF MF application in enhancing enzyme activity against Gram-negative pathogens.
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spelling pubmed-103848122023-07-30 E. coli Cell Lysis Induced by Lys394 Enzyme Assisted by Magnetic Nanoparticles Exposed to Non-Heating Low-Frequency Magnetic Field Usvaliev, Azizbek D. Belogurova, Natalia G. Pokholok, Konstantin V. Finko, Alexander V. Prusov, Andrey N. Golovin, Dmitry Yu. Miroshnikov, Konstantin A. Golovin, Yuri I. Klyachko, Natalia L. Pharmaceutics Article The spreading of microbial pathogens with more and more resistance to traditional low-molecular antibiotic agents demands new approaches to antibacterial therapy. The employment of bacteriophage enzymes capable of breaking bacterial cell walls has attracted much interest within this context. The specific features of the morphology of Gram-negative bacteria prevent the effective direct usage of lytic enzymes and require assistance from additional helpers to facilitate cell lysis. The current work is devoted to the study of boosting the lysis of Escherichia coli (E. coli) JM 109 and MH 1 strains induced by Lys394 bacteriophage endolysin by means of rod-like (56 × 13 nm) magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) activated by a non-heating low-frequency magnetic field (LF MF) with a frequency of 50 Hz and a flux density of 68.5 mT in a pulse–pause mode (1 s on and 0.3 s off). According to theoretical assumptions, the mechanism of MNP assistance is presumably based upon the disordering of the outer membrane that facilitates enzyme permeation into peptidoglycans to its substrate. It is found that the effect of the LF MF reaches an almost a twofold acceleration of the enzyme reaction, resulting in almost 80 and 70%, respectively, of lysed E. coli JM 109 and MH 1 cells in 21 min. An increase in the membrane permeability was proven by two independent experiments employing β-lactamase periplasmic enzyme leakage and Nile Red (NR) hydrophobic dye fluorescence. It is shown that the outer membrane disordering of E. coli caused by exposure to LF MF nanoparticle movement leads to almost complete (more than 80%) β-lactamase release out of the cells’ periplasm to the buffer suspension. Experiments with NR (displaying fluorescence in a non-polar medium only) reveal a drastic reduction in NR fluorescence intensity, reaching a change of an order of magnitude when exposed to LF MF. The data obtained provide evidence of changes in the bacterial cell wall structure. The result shown open up the prospects of non-heating LF MF application in enhancing enzyme activity against Gram-negative pathogens. MDPI 2023-07-03 /pmc/articles/PMC10384812/ /pubmed/37514057 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15071871 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Usvaliev, Azizbek D.
Belogurova, Natalia G.
Pokholok, Konstantin V.
Finko, Alexander V.
Prusov, Andrey N.
Golovin, Dmitry Yu.
Miroshnikov, Konstantin A.
Golovin, Yuri I.
Klyachko, Natalia L.
E. coli Cell Lysis Induced by Lys394 Enzyme Assisted by Magnetic Nanoparticles Exposed to Non-Heating Low-Frequency Magnetic Field
title E. coli Cell Lysis Induced by Lys394 Enzyme Assisted by Magnetic Nanoparticles Exposed to Non-Heating Low-Frequency Magnetic Field
title_full E. coli Cell Lysis Induced by Lys394 Enzyme Assisted by Magnetic Nanoparticles Exposed to Non-Heating Low-Frequency Magnetic Field
title_fullStr E. coli Cell Lysis Induced by Lys394 Enzyme Assisted by Magnetic Nanoparticles Exposed to Non-Heating Low-Frequency Magnetic Field
title_full_unstemmed E. coli Cell Lysis Induced by Lys394 Enzyme Assisted by Magnetic Nanoparticles Exposed to Non-Heating Low-Frequency Magnetic Field
title_short E. coli Cell Lysis Induced by Lys394 Enzyme Assisted by Magnetic Nanoparticles Exposed to Non-Heating Low-Frequency Magnetic Field
title_sort e. coli cell lysis induced by lys394 enzyme assisted by magnetic nanoparticles exposed to non-heating low-frequency magnetic field
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10384812/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37514057
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15071871
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