4.7 Article

The Multifaceted Antibacterial Mechanisms of the Pioneering Peptide Antibiotics Tyrocidine and Gramicidin S

Journal

MBIO
Volume 9, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.00802-18

Keywords

antibiotics; antimicrobial peptides; bacterial cell biology; bacterial cytological profiling; cell membranes; mode of action

Categories

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) [91111009]
  2. NWO Vici grant [STW-Vici 12128]
  3. BIOPEP Peptide Fund
  4. Protea SA-France exchange grant
  5. Amsterdam Infection and Immunity Institute

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Cyclic beta-sheet decapeptides from the tyrocidine group and the homologous gramicidin S were the first commercially used antibiotics, yet it remains unclear exactly how they kill bacteria. We investigated their mode of action using a bacterial cytological profiling approach. Tyrocidines form defined ion-conducting pores, induce lipid phase separation, and strongly reduce membrane fluidity, resulting in delocalization of a broad range of peripheral and integral membrane proteins. Interestingly, they also cause DNA damage and interfere with DNA-binding proteins. Despite sharing 50% sequence identity with tyrocidines, gramicidin S causes only mild lipid demixing with minor effects on membrane fluidity and permeability. Gramicidin S delocalizes peripheral membrane proteins involved in cell division and cell envelope synthesis but does not affect integral membrane proteins or DNA. Our results shed a new light on the multifaceted antibacterial mechanisms of these antibiotics and explain why resistance to them is virtually nonexistent. IMPORTANCE Cyclic beta-sheet decapeptides, such as tyrocidines and gramicidin S, were among the first antibiotics in clinical application. Although they have been used for such a long time, there is virtually no resistance to them, which has led to a renewed interest in this peptide class. Both tyrocidines and gramicidin S are thought to disrupt the bacterial membrane. However, this knowledge is mainly derived from in vitro studies, and there is surprisingly little knowledge about how these long-established antibiotics kill bacteria. Our results shed new light on the antibacterial mechanism of beta-sheet peptide antibiotics and explain why they are still so effective and why there is so little resistance to them.

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