4.5 Article

Effects of the antimicrobial peptide temporin L on cell morphology, membrane and viability of Escherichia coli

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 380, Issue -, Pages 859-865

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20031975

Keywords

amphibian skin; antimicrobial peptide; Escherichia coli; fluorescence microscopy; membrane permeability; temporin L.

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Antimicrobial peptides are produced by all organisms in response to microbial invasion and are considered as promising candidates for future antibiotics. There is a wealth of evidence that many of them interact and increase the permeability of bacterial membranes as part of their killing mechanism. However, it is not clear whether this is the lethal step. To address this issue, we studied the interaction of the antimicrobial peptide temporin L with Escherichia coli by using fluorescence, confocal and electron microscopy. The peptide previously isolated from skin secretions of the frog Rana temporaria has the sequence FVQWFSKFLG-RIL-NH2. With regard to fluorescence microscopy, we applied, for the first time, a triple-staining method based on the fluoro-chromes 5-cyano-2,3-ditolyl tetrazolium chloride, 4',6-diamidino-2-pherylindole and FITC. This technique enabled us to identify, in the same sample, both living and total cells, as well as bacteria with altered membrane perrineability. These results reveal that temporin L increases the permeability of the bacterial inner membrane in a dose-dependent manner without destroying the cell's integrity. At low peptide concentrations, the inner membrane becomes permeable to small molecules but does not allow the killing of bacteria. However, at high peptide concentrations, larger molecules, but not DNA, leak out, which results in cell death. Very interestingly, in contrast with many antimicrobial peptides, temporin L does not lyse E. coli cells but rather forms ghostlike bacteria, as observed by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Besides shedding light on the mode of action of temporin L and possibly that of other antimicrobial peptides, the present study demonstrates the advantage of using the triple-fluorescence approach combined with microscopical techniques to explore the mechanism of membrane-active peptides in general.

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