Antimicrobial peptides: mechanism of action and lipid-mediated synergistic interactions within membranes.


Journal

Faraday discussions
ISSN: 1364-5498
Titre abrégé: Faraday Discuss
Pays: England
ID NLM: 9212301

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
24 12 2021
Historique:
pubmed: 18 9 2021
medline: 3 2 2022
entrez: 17 9 2021
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Biophysical and structural studies of peptide-lipid interactions, peptide topology and dynamics have changed our view of how antimicrobial peptides insert and interact with membranes. Clearly, both peptides and lipids are highly dynamic, and change and mutually adapt their conformation, membrane penetration and detailed morphology on a local and a global level. As a consequence, peptides and lipids can form a wide variety of supramolecular assemblies in which the more hydrophobic sequences preferentially, but not exclusively, adopt transmembrane alignments and have the potential to form oligomeric structures similar to those suggested by the transmembrane helical bundle model. In contrast, charged amphipathic sequences tend to stay intercalated at the membrane interface. Although the membranes are soft and can adapt, at increasing peptide density they cause pronounced disruptions of the phospholipid fatty acyl packing. At even higher local or global concentrations the peptides cause transient membrane openings, rupture and ultimately lysis. Interestingly, mixtures of peptides such as magainin 2 and PGLa, which are stored and secreted naturally as a cocktail, exhibit considerably enhanced antimicrobial activities when investigated together in antimicrobial assays and also in pore forming experiments applied to biophysical model systems. Our most recent investigations reveal that these peptides do not form stable complexes but act by specific lipid-mediated interactions and the nanoscale properties of phospholipid bilayers.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34533138
doi: 10.1039/d0fd00041h
doi:

Substances chimiques

Antimicrobial Peptides 0
Lipid Bilayers 0
Lipids 0
Magainins 0

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

419-434

Auteurs

Dennis W Juhl (DW)

Université de Strasbourg/CNRS, UMR7177, Institut de Chimie, 4, rue Blaise Pascal, 67070 Strasbourg, France. bechinge@unistra.fr.

Elise Glattard (E)

Université de Strasbourg/CNRS, UMR7177, Institut de Chimie, 4, rue Blaise Pascal, 67070 Strasbourg, France. bechinge@unistra.fr.

Christopher Aisenbrey (C)

Université de Strasbourg/CNRS, UMR7177, Institut de Chimie, 4, rue Blaise Pascal, 67070 Strasbourg, France. bechinge@unistra.fr.

Burkhard Bechinger (B)

Université de Strasbourg/CNRS, UMR7177, Institut de Chimie, 4, rue Blaise Pascal, 67070 Strasbourg, France. bechinge@unistra.fr.
Institut Universitaire de France, France.

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Classifications MeSH