In situ captured antibacterial action of membrane-incising peptide lamellae

el Battioui, Kamal [El Battioui, Kamal (Chemistry), author] Biomolecular Self-Assembly Research Group (IMEC); Chakraborty, Sohini; Wacha, András [Wacha, András Ferenc (Fizika), author] BNK (IMEC); Institute of Materials and Environmental Chemistry; Molnár, Dániel [Molnár, Dániel (molekuláris bioló...), author] Institute of Molecular Life Sciences; Quemé-Peña, Mayra [Quemé Peña, Mayra (Mayra Quemé-Peña), author] Biomolecular Self-Assembly Research Group (IMEC); Szigyártó, Imola Cs. [Szigyártó, Imola Csilla (Bioszervetlen kémia), author] Biomolecular Self-Assembly Research Group (IMEC); Institute of Materials and Environmental Chemistry; Szabó, Csenge Lilla [Szabó, Csenge Lilla (NMR spektroszkópia), author] Hevesy György PhD School of Chemistry (ELTE / ELU FoS); Analytical and BioNMR Laboratory (ELTE / ELU FoS / IC / DAC); Bodor, Andrea [Bodor, Andrea (NMR spektroszkópia), author] Analytical and BioNMR Laboratory (ELTE / ELU FoS / IC / DAC); Horváti, Kata [Horváti, Kata (Szerves kémia), author] MTA-TTK Lendület "Momentum" Peptide-Based Vacci... (IMEC); HUN-REN-ELTE Research Group of Peptide Chemistry (ELTE / ELU FoS / IC); Gyulai, Gergő [Gyulai, Gergő (Kolloid- és felül...), author] Laboratory of Interfaces and Nanosize Systems (... (ELTE / ELU FoS / IC); MTA-TTK Lendület "Momentum" Peptide-Based Vacci... (IMEC); Bősze, Szilvia [Bősze, Szilvia (Peptidkémia), author] HUN-REN-ELTE Research Group of Peptide Chemistry (ELTE / ELU FoS / IC); Mihály, Judith [Mihály, Judith (IR és Raman spekt...), author] BNK (IMEC); Institute of Materials and Environmental Chemistry; Jezsó, Bálint [Jezsó, Bálint (Sejtbiológia), author] Department of Biochemistry (ELTE / ELU FoS / Bio_I); BNK (IMEC); Románszki, Loránd [Románszki, Loránd (Kémia), author] Functional Interfaces (IMEC); Institute of Materials and Environmental Chemistry; Tóth, Judit [Tóth, Judit (Biokémia, enzimol...), author] Department of Applied Biotechnology and Food Sc... (BUTE / FCTB); Institute of Molecular Life Sciences; Varga, Zoltán [Varga, Zoltán (biofizika, kolloi...), author] Department of Physical Chemistry and Material S... (BUTE / FCTB); BNK (IMEC); Mándity, István [Mándity, István (Gyógyszerkémia, g...), author] Department of Organic Chemistry (SU / FP); Artificial Transporters Research Group (IMEC); Juhász, Tünde [Juhász, Tünde (Enzimológia), author] Biomolecular Self-Assembly Research Group (IMEC); Beke-Somfai, Tamás ✉ [Beke-Somfai, Tamás (Kémia), author] Biomolecular Self-Assembly Research Group (IMEC); Institute of Materials and Environmental Chemistry

English Article (Journal Article) Scientific
Published: NATURE COMMUNICATIONS 2041-1723 2041-1723 15 (1) Paper: 3424 , 14 p. 2024
  • Regionális Tudományok Bizottsága: A nemzetközi
  • SJR Scopus - Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous): D1
Identifiers
Fundings:
  • (LP2016-2) Funder: MTA Lendület
  • (NVKP_16-1-2016-0007) Funder: NKFIH
  • (BIONANO_GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00017) Funder: GINOP
  • (TKP2021-EGA-31)
  • (2020-1.1.2-PIACI-KFI-2020-00021)
  • (2019-2.1.11-TÉT-2019-00091)
  • KKP_22 Project(144180)
  • (K131594) Funder: NRDIO
  • (K124900)
  • (K137940)
  • (K142904)
  • (K138318)
  • TKP2020-NKA-06(Thematic Excellence Programme TKP2020-NKA-06 (National Challenges Subprogramme)) Funder: NKFI
Developing unique mechanisms of action are essential to combat the growing issue of antimicrobial resistance. Supramolecular assemblies combining the improved biostability of non-natural compounds with the complex membrane-attacking mechanisms of natural peptides are promising alternatives to conventional antibiotics. However, for such compounds the direct visual insight on antibacterial action is still lacking. Here we employ a design strategy focusing on an inducible assembly mechanism and utilized electron microscopy (EM) to follow the formation of supramolecular structures of lysine-rich heterochiral β 3 -peptides, termed lamellin-2K and lamellin-3K, triggered by bacterial cell surface lipopolysaccharides. Combined molecular dynamics simulations, EM and bacterial assays confirmed that the phosphate-induced conformational change on these lamellins led to the formation of striped lamellae capable of incising the cell envelope of Gram-negative bacteria thereby exerting antibacterial activity. Our findings also provide a mechanistic link for membrane-targeting agents depicting the antibiotic mechanism derived from the in-situ formation of active supramolecules.
Citation styles: IEEEACMAPAChicagoHarvardCSLCopyPrint
2025-04-04 21:46