School of Chemistry, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010, Australia.
Sci Rep. 2013;3:1557. doi: 10.1038/srep01557.
Antimicrobial peptides hold promise as broad-spectrum alternatives to conventional antibiotics. The mechanism of action of this class of peptide is a topical area of research focused predominantly on their interaction with artificial membranes. Here we compare the interaction mechanism of a model antimicrobial peptide with single artificial membranes and live bacterial cells. The interaction kinetics was imaged using time-lapse fluorescence lifetime imaging of a fluorescently-tagged melittin derivative. Interaction with the synthetic membranes resulted in membrane pore formation. In contrast, the interaction with bacteria led to transient membrane disruption and corresponding leakage of the cytoplasm, but surprisingly with a much reduced level of pore formation. The discovery that pore formation is a less significant part of lipid-peptide interaction in live bacteria highlights the mechanistic complexity of these interactions in living cells compared to simple artificial systems.
抗菌肽有望成为传统抗生素的广谱替代品。这类肽的作用机制是一个研究的热点领域,主要集中在它们与人工膜的相互作用上。在这里,我们比较了一种模型抗菌肽与单一人工膜和活细菌细胞的相互作用机制。使用荧光标记的蜂毒素衍生物的荧光寿命成像的延时荧光寿命成像来对相互作用动力学进行成像。与合成膜的相互作用导致了膜孔的形成。相比之下,与细菌的相互作用导致了瞬时的膜破裂和细胞质的相应泄漏,但令人惊讶的是,孔的形成水平大大降低。发现在活细菌中,孔的形成是脂质-肽相互作用的一个不那么重要的部分,这突出了这些相互作用在活细胞中的机制复杂性,与简单的人工系统相比。