4.8 Article

Mechanism of a prototypical synthetic membrane-active antimicrobial: Efficient hole-punching via interaction with negative intrinsic curvature lipids

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0806456105

Keywords

antibiotic resistant bacteria; host defense peptides; innate immunity; protein-membrane interactions

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DMR08-04363, CBET08-27293]
  2. Center of Advanced Materials for Purification of Water with Systems Science and Technology Centers
  3. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute-University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center, National Institutes of Health [R01-Al-074866, R01 AI15650]
  4. Office of Naval Research [N00014-03-1-0503]

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Phenylene ethynylenes comprise a prototypical class of synthetic antimicrobial compounds that mimic antimicrobial peptides produced by eukaryotes and have broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity. We show unambiguously that bacterial membrane permeation by these antimicrobials depends on the presence of negative intrinsic curvature lipids, such as phosphatidylethanolamine ( PE) lipids, found in high concentrations within bacterial membranes. Plate-killing assays indicate that a PE-knockout mutant strain of Escherichia coli drastically out-survives the wild type against the membrane-active phenylene ethynylene antimicrobials, whereas the opposite is true when challenged with traditional metabolic antibiotics. That the PE deletion is a lethal mutation in normative environments suggests that resistant bacterial strains do not evolve because a lethal mutation is required to gain immunity. PE lipids allow efficient generation of negative curvature required for the circumferential barrel of an induced membrane pore; an inverted hexagonal H-II phase, which consists of arrays of water channels, is induced by a small number of antimicrobial molecules. The estimated antimicrobial occupation in these water channels is nonlinear and jumps from approximate to 1 to 3 per 4 nm of induced water channel length as the global antimicrobial concentration is increased. By comparing to exactly solvable 1D spin models for magnetic systems, we quantify the cooperativity of these antimicrobials.

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