Leptihn Sebastian, Har Jia Yi, Chen Jianzhu, Ho Bow, Wohland Thorsten, Ding Jeak Ling
Singapore-MIT Alliance, Singapore.
BMC Biol. 2009 May 11;7:22. doi: 10.1186/1741-7007-7-22.
Antimicrobial peptides are found in all kingdoms of life. During the evolution of multicellular organisms, antimicrobial peptides were established as key elements of innate immunity. Most antimicrobial peptides are thought to work by disrupting the integrity of cell membranes, causing pathogen death. As antimicrobial peptides target the membrane structure, pathogens can only acquire resistance by a fundamental change in membrane composition. Hence, the evolution of pathogen resistance has been a slow process. Therefore antimicrobial peptides are valuable alternatives to classical antibiotics against which multiple drug-resistant bacteria have emerged. For potential therapeutic applications as antibiotics a thorough knowledge of their mechanism of action is essential. Despite the increasingly comprehensive understanding of the biochemical properties of these peptides, the actual mechanism by which antimicrobial peptides lyse microbes is controversial.
Here we investigate how Sushi 1, an antimicrobial peptide derived from the horseshoe crab (Carcinoscorpius rotundicauda), induces lysis of Gram-negative bacteria. To follow the entire process of antimicrobial action, we performed a variety of experiments including transmission electron microscopy and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy as well as single molecule tracking of quantum dot-labeled antimicrobial peptides on live bacteria. Since in vitro measurements do not necessarily correlate with the in vivo action of a peptide we developed a novel fluorescent live bacteria lysis assay. Using fully functional nanoparticle-labeled Sushi 1, we observed the process of antimicrobial action at the single-molecule level.
Recently the hypothesis that many antimicrobial peptides act on internal targets to kill the bacterium has been discussed. Here, we demonstrate that the target sites of Sushi 1 are outer and inner membranes and are not cytosolic. Further, our findings suggest four successive steps of the bactericidal process: 1) Binding, mediated mainly by charged residues in the peptide; 2) Peptide association, as peptide concentration increases evidenced by a change in diffusive behavior; 3) Membrane disruption, during which lipopolysaccharide is not released; and 4) Lysis, by leakage of cytosolic content through large membrane defects.
抗菌肽存在于所有生物界。在多细胞生物的进化过程中,抗菌肽成为先天免疫的关键要素。大多数抗菌肽被认为是通过破坏细胞膜的完整性来发挥作用,从而导致病原体死亡。由于抗菌肽靶向膜结构,病原体只能通过膜成分的根本性改变来获得抗性。因此,病原体抗性的进化是一个缓慢的过程。所以,抗菌肽是对抗出现多重耐药性细菌的传统抗生素的有价值替代品。对于作为抗生素的潜在治疗应用,深入了解其作用机制至关重要。尽管对这些肽的生化特性的理解日益全面,但抗菌肽裂解微生物的实际机制仍存在争议。
在此,我们研究了源自圆尾鲎(Carcinoscorpius rotundicauda)的抗菌肽Sushi 1如何诱导革兰氏阴性菌裂解。为了追踪抗菌作用的全过程,我们进行了多种实验,包括透射电子显微镜、荧光相关光谱以及量子点标记的抗菌肽在活细菌上的单分子追踪。由于体外测量不一定与肽的体内作用相关,我们开发了一种新型的荧光活细菌裂解测定法。使用功能完备的纳米颗粒标记的Sushi 1,我们在单分子水平观察到了抗菌作用过程。
最近,关于许多抗菌肽作用于内部靶点以杀死细菌的假说已被讨论。在此,我们证明Sushi 1的靶点是外膜和内膜,而非胞质溶胶。此外,我们的研究结果表明杀菌过程有四个连续步骤:1)结合,主要由肽中的带电荷残基介导;2)肽缔合,随着肽浓度增加,扩散行为的变化证明了这一点;3)膜破坏,在此过程中脂多糖未释放;4)裂解,通过胞质内容物通过大的膜缺陷泄漏实现。