The Mechanisms of Action of Cationic Antimicrobial Peptides Refined by Novel Concepts from Biophysical Investigations.

Fiche publication


Date publication

janvier 2019

Journal

Advances in experimental medicine and biology

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr BECHINGER Burkhard


Tous les auteurs :
Aisenbrey C, Marquette A, Bechinger B

Résumé

Even 30 years after the discovery of magainins, biophysical and structural investigations on how these peptides interact with membranes can still bear surprises and add new interesting detail to how these peptides exert their antimicrobial action. Early on, using oriented solid-state NMR spectroscopy, it was found that the amphipathic helices formed by magainins are active when being oriented parallel to the membrane surface. More recent investigations indicate that this in-planar alignment is also found when PGLa and magainin in combination exert synergistic pore-forming activities, where studies on the mechanism of synergistic interaction are ongoing. In a related manner, the investigation of dimeric antimicrobial peptide sequences has become an interesting topic of research which bears promise to refine our views how antimicrobial action occurs. The molecular shape concept has been introduced to explain the effects of lipids and peptides on membrane morphology, locally and globally, and in particular of cationic amphipathic helices that partition into the membrane interface. This concept has been extended in this review to include more recent ideas on soft membranes that can adapt to external stimuli including membrane-disruptive molecules. In this manner, the lipids can change their shape in the presence of low peptide concentrations, thereby maintaining the bilayer properties. At higher peptide concentrations, phase transitions occur which lead to the formation of pores and membrane lytic processes. In the context of the molecular shape concept, the properties of lipopeptides, including surfactins, are shortly presented, and comparisons with the hydrophobic alamethicin sequence are made.

Mots clés

Alamethicin, Carpet model, Cecropin, LL37, Magainin, Membrane macroscopic phase, Membrane pore, Membrane topology, Molecular shape concept, PGLa, Peptide-lipid interactions, SMART model, Surfactin, Toroidal pore model

Référence

Adv. Exp. Med. Biol.. 2019 ;1117:33-64