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Polydim-I antimicrobial activity against MDR bacteria and its model membrane interaction

The rapid spread of multi-drug resistant pathogens represents a serious threat to public health, considering factors such as high mortality rates, treatment restrictions and high prevalence of multi-drug resistant bacteria in the hospital environment. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) may exhibit powerf...

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Autores principales: Rangel, Marisa, Castro, Fabíola Fernandes dos Santos, Mota-Lima, Lilian Daiene, Clissa, Patricia Bianca, Martins, Danubia Batista, Cabrera, Marcia Perez dos Santos, Mortari, Marcia Renata
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5453574/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28570651
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0178785
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author Rangel, Marisa
Castro, Fabíola Fernandes dos Santos
Mota-Lima, Lilian Daiene
Clissa, Patricia Bianca
Martins, Danubia Batista
Cabrera, Marcia Perez dos Santos
Mortari, Marcia Renata
author_facet Rangel, Marisa
Castro, Fabíola Fernandes dos Santos
Mota-Lima, Lilian Daiene
Clissa, Patricia Bianca
Martins, Danubia Batista
Cabrera, Marcia Perez dos Santos
Mortari, Marcia Renata
author_sort Rangel, Marisa
collection PubMed
description The rapid spread of multi-drug resistant pathogens represents a serious threat to public health, considering factors such as high mortality rates, treatment restrictions and high prevalence of multi-drug resistant bacteria in the hospital environment. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) may exhibit powerful antimicrobial activity against different and diverse microorganisms, also presenting the advantage of absence or low toxicity towards animal cells. In this study, the evaluation of the antimicrobial activity against multi-drug resistant bacteria of a recently described AMP from wasp, Polydim-I, was performed. Polydim-I presented activity against standard strains (non-carriers of multi-resistant genes) that are susceptible to commercial antimicrobials, and also against multi-drug resistant strains at concentrations bellow 1μg/ml (0.41 μM). This is a rather low concentration among those reported for AMPs. At this concentration we found out that Polydim-I inhibits almost 100% of the tested pathogens growth, while with the ATCC strains the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC(100)) is 400 times higher. Also, in relation to in vitro activity of conventional drugs against multi-drug resistant bacteria strains, Polydim-I is almost 10 times more efficient and with broader spectrum. Cationic AMPs are known as multi-target compounds and specially for targeting the phospholipid matrix of bacterial membranes. Exploring the interactions of Polydim-I with lipid bilayers, we have confirmed that this interaction is involved in the mechanism of action. Circular dichroism experiments showed that Polydim-I undergoes a conformational transition from random coil to a mostly helical conformation in the presence of membrane mimetic environments. Zeta potential measurements confirmed the binding and partial charge neutralization of anionic asolectin vesicles, and also suggested a possible aggregation of peptide molecules. FTIR experiments confirmed that some peptide aggregation occurs, which is minimized in the presence of strongly anionic micelles of sodium dodecyl sulfate. Also, Polydim-I induced channel-like structures formation to asolectin lipid bilayers, as demonstrated in the electrophysiology experiments. We suggest that cationic Polydim-I targets the membrane lipids due to electrostatic attraction, partially accumulates, neutralizing the opposite charges and induces pore formation. Similar mechanism of action has already been suggested for other peptides from wasp venoms, especially mastoparans.
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spelling pubmed-54535742017-06-12 Polydim-I antimicrobial activity against MDR bacteria and its model membrane interaction Rangel, Marisa Castro, Fabíola Fernandes dos Santos Mota-Lima, Lilian Daiene Clissa, Patricia Bianca Martins, Danubia Batista Cabrera, Marcia Perez dos Santos Mortari, Marcia Renata PLoS One Research Article The rapid spread of multi-drug resistant pathogens represents a serious threat to public health, considering factors such as high mortality rates, treatment restrictions and high prevalence of multi-drug resistant bacteria in the hospital environment. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) may exhibit powerful antimicrobial activity against different and diverse microorganisms, also presenting the advantage of absence or low toxicity towards animal cells. In this study, the evaluation of the antimicrobial activity against multi-drug resistant bacteria of a recently described AMP from wasp, Polydim-I, was performed. Polydim-I presented activity against standard strains (non-carriers of multi-resistant genes) that are susceptible to commercial antimicrobials, and also against multi-drug resistant strains at concentrations bellow 1μg/ml (0.41 μM). This is a rather low concentration among those reported for AMPs. At this concentration we found out that Polydim-I inhibits almost 100% of the tested pathogens growth, while with the ATCC strains the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC(100)) is 400 times higher. Also, in relation to in vitro activity of conventional drugs against multi-drug resistant bacteria strains, Polydim-I is almost 10 times more efficient and with broader spectrum. Cationic AMPs are known as multi-target compounds and specially for targeting the phospholipid matrix of bacterial membranes. Exploring the interactions of Polydim-I with lipid bilayers, we have confirmed that this interaction is involved in the mechanism of action. Circular dichroism experiments showed that Polydim-I undergoes a conformational transition from random coil to a mostly helical conformation in the presence of membrane mimetic environments. Zeta potential measurements confirmed the binding and partial charge neutralization of anionic asolectin vesicles, and also suggested a possible aggregation of peptide molecules. FTIR experiments confirmed that some peptide aggregation occurs, which is minimized in the presence of strongly anionic micelles of sodium dodecyl sulfate. Also, Polydim-I induced channel-like structures formation to asolectin lipid bilayers, as demonstrated in the electrophysiology experiments. We suggest that cationic Polydim-I targets the membrane lipids due to electrostatic attraction, partially accumulates, neutralizing the opposite charges and induces pore formation. Similar mechanism of action has already been suggested for other peptides from wasp venoms, especially mastoparans. Public Library of Science 2017-06-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5453574/ /pubmed/28570651 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0178785 Text en © 2017 Rangel et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rangel, Marisa
Castro, Fabíola Fernandes dos Santos
Mota-Lima, Lilian Daiene
Clissa, Patricia Bianca
Martins, Danubia Batista
Cabrera, Marcia Perez dos Santos
Mortari, Marcia Renata
Polydim-I antimicrobial activity against MDR bacteria and its model membrane interaction
title Polydim-I antimicrobial activity against MDR bacteria and its model membrane interaction
title_full Polydim-I antimicrobial activity against MDR bacteria and its model membrane interaction
title_fullStr Polydim-I antimicrobial activity against MDR bacteria and its model membrane interaction
title_full_unstemmed Polydim-I antimicrobial activity against MDR bacteria and its model membrane interaction
title_short Polydim-I antimicrobial activity against MDR bacteria and its model membrane interaction
title_sort polydim-i antimicrobial activity against mdr bacteria and its model membrane interaction
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5453574/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28570651
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0178785
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