Cargando…

Membranolytic Mechanism of Amphiphilic Antimicrobial β-Stranded [KL](n) Peptides

Amphipathic peptides can act as antibiotics due to membrane permeabilization. KL peptides with the repetitive sequence [Lys-Leu](n)-NH(2) form amphipathic β-strands in the presence of lipid bilayers. As they are known to kill bacteria in a peculiar length-dependent manner, we suggest here several di...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Schweigardt, Fabian, Strandberg, Erik, Wadhwani, Parvesh, Reichert, Johannes, Bürck, Jochen, Cravo, Haroldo L. P., Burger, Luisa, Ulrich, Anne S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9495826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36140173
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10092071
_version_ 1784794115799515136
author Schweigardt, Fabian
Strandberg, Erik
Wadhwani, Parvesh
Reichert, Johannes
Bürck, Jochen
Cravo, Haroldo L. P.
Burger, Luisa
Ulrich, Anne S.
author_facet Schweigardt, Fabian
Strandberg, Erik
Wadhwani, Parvesh
Reichert, Johannes
Bürck, Jochen
Cravo, Haroldo L. P.
Burger, Luisa
Ulrich, Anne S.
author_sort Schweigardt, Fabian
collection PubMed
description Amphipathic peptides can act as antibiotics due to membrane permeabilization. KL peptides with the repetitive sequence [Lys-Leu](n)-NH(2) form amphipathic β-strands in the presence of lipid bilayers. As they are known to kill bacteria in a peculiar length-dependent manner, we suggest here several different functional models, all of which seem plausible, including a carpet mechanism, a β-barrel pore, a toroidal wormhole, and a β-helix. To resolve their genuine mechanism, the activity of KL peptides with lengths from 6–26 amino acids (plus some inverted LK analogues) was systematically tested against bacteria and erythrocytes. Vesicle leakage assays served to correlate bilayer thickness and peptide length and to examine the role of membrane curvature and putative pore diameter. KL peptides with 10–12 amino acids showed the best therapeutic potential, i.e., high antimicrobial activity and low hemolytic side effects. Mechanistically, this particular window of an optimum β-strand length around 4 nm (11 amino acids × 3.7 Å) would match the typical thickness of a lipid bilayer, implying the formation of a transmembrane pore. Solid-state (15)N- and (19)F-NMR structure analysis, however, showed that the KL backbone lies flat on the membrane surface under all conditions. We can thus refute any of the pore models and conclude that the KL peptides rather disrupt membranes by a carpet mechanism. The intriguing length-dependent optimum in activity can be fully explained by two counteracting effects, i.e., membrane binding versus amyloid formation. Very short KL peptides are inactive, because they are unable to bind to the lipid bilayer as flexible β-strands, whereas very long peptides are inactive due to vigorous pre-aggregation into β-sheets in solution.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9495826
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-94958262022-09-23 Membranolytic Mechanism of Amphiphilic Antimicrobial β-Stranded [KL](n) Peptides Schweigardt, Fabian Strandberg, Erik Wadhwani, Parvesh Reichert, Johannes Bürck, Jochen Cravo, Haroldo L. P. Burger, Luisa Ulrich, Anne S. Biomedicines Article Amphipathic peptides can act as antibiotics due to membrane permeabilization. KL peptides with the repetitive sequence [Lys-Leu](n)-NH(2) form amphipathic β-strands in the presence of lipid bilayers. As they are known to kill bacteria in a peculiar length-dependent manner, we suggest here several different functional models, all of which seem plausible, including a carpet mechanism, a β-barrel pore, a toroidal wormhole, and a β-helix. To resolve their genuine mechanism, the activity of KL peptides with lengths from 6–26 amino acids (plus some inverted LK analogues) was systematically tested against bacteria and erythrocytes. Vesicle leakage assays served to correlate bilayer thickness and peptide length and to examine the role of membrane curvature and putative pore diameter. KL peptides with 10–12 amino acids showed the best therapeutic potential, i.e., high antimicrobial activity and low hemolytic side effects. Mechanistically, this particular window of an optimum β-strand length around 4 nm (11 amino acids × 3.7 Å) would match the typical thickness of a lipid bilayer, implying the formation of a transmembrane pore. Solid-state (15)N- and (19)F-NMR structure analysis, however, showed that the KL backbone lies flat on the membrane surface under all conditions. We can thus refute any of the pore models and conclude that the KL peptides rather disrupt membranes by a carpet mechanism. The intriguing length-dependent optimum in activity can be fully explained by two counteracting effects, i.e., membrane binding versus amyloid formation. Very short KL peptides are inactive, because they are unable to bind to the lipid bilayer as flexible β-strands, whereas very long peptides are inactive due to vigorous pre-aggregation into β-sheets in solution. MDPI 2022-08-24 /pmc/articles/PMC9495826/ /pubmed/36140173 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10092071 Text en © 2022 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
Schweigardt, Fabian
Strandberg, Erik
Wadhwani, Parvesh
Reichert, Johannes
Bürck, Jochen
Cravo, Haroldo L. P.
Burger, Luisa
Ulrich, Anne S.
Membranolytic Mechanism of Amphiphilic Antimicrobial β-Stranded [KL](n) Peptides
title Membranolytic Mechanism of Amphiphilic Antimicrobial β-Stranded [KL](n) Peptides
title_full Membranolytic Mechanism of Amphiphilic Antimicrobial β-Stranded [KL](n) Peptides
title_fullStr Membranolytic Mechanism of Amphiphilic Antimicrobial β-Stranded [KL](n) Peptides
title_full_unstemmed Membranolytic Mechanism of Amphiphilic Antimicrobial β-Stranded [KL](n) Peptides
title_short Membranolytic Mechanism of Amphiphilic Antimicrobial β-Stranded [KL](n) Peptides
title_sort membranolytic mechanism of amphiphilic antimicrobial β-stranded [kl](n) peptides
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9495826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36140173
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10092071
work_keys_str_mv AT schweigardtfabian membranolyticmechanismofamphiphilicantimicrobialbstrandedklnpeptides
AT strandbergerik membranolyticmechanismofamphiphilicantimicrobialbstrandedklnpeptides
AT wadhwaniparvesh membranolyticmechanismofamphiphilicantimicrobialbstrandedklnpeptides
AT reichertjohannes membranolyticmechanismofamphiphilicantimicrobialbstrandedklnpeptides
AT burckjochen membranolyticmechanismofamphiphilicantimicrobialbstrandedklnpeptides
AT cravoharoldolp membranolyticmechanismofamphiphilicantimicrobialbstrandedklnpeptides
AT burgerluisa membranolyticmechanismofamphiphilicantimicrobialbstrandedklnpeptides
AT ulrichannes membranolyticmechanismofamphiphilicantimicrobialbstrandedklnpeptides