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LL-37

Cathelicidin, hCAP-18, FALL-39, CAP-18

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2016 pubmed 26 citations

Single-cell, time-resolved study of the effects of the antimicrobial peptide alamethicin on Bacillus subtilis.

Barns. Kenneth J KJ; Weisshaar. James C JC

Key Findings

  • Growth stops before the cell membrane is permeabilized
  • Proton‑motive force drops minutes before rapid membrane rupture
  • Membrane permeabilization happens uniformly in <5 seconds
  • Cell shrinks and leaks contents as the envelope breaks down
  • Mechanism could be barrel‑stave, chaotic pore, or carpet; not definitively resolved
  • Brief contrast with human cathelicidin LL‑37

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the work mainly adds basic science about how bacterial‑killing peptides work and offers no direct guidance for human use, dosing, or longevity protocols. It suggests that LL‑37 may act differently, but the study doesn’t provide actionable steps for supplementation or health optimization.

Summary

The study watched how the antimicrobial peptide alamethicin attacks single Bacillus subtilis bacteria. It found that the bacteria stop growing before their membranes get damaged, then lose their internal charge and finally burst open quickly. The way the peptide makes holes in the cell wall isn’t fully clear, and the researchers only briefly compare it to the human peptide LL‑37.

Abstract

Alamethicin is a well-studied antimicrobial peptide (AMP) that kills Gram-positive bacteria. It forms narrow, barrel-stave pores in planar lipid bilayers. We present a detailed, time-resolved microscopy study of the sequence of events during the attack of alamethicin on individual, live Bacillus subtilis cells expressing GFP in the cytoplasm. At the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC), the first observed symptom is the halting of growth, as judged by the plateau in measured cell length vs time. The data strongly suggest that this growth-halting event occurs prior to membrane permeabilization. Gradual degradation of the proton-motive force, inferred from a decrease in pH-dependent GFP fluorescence intensity, evidently begins minutes later and continues over about 5 min. There follows an abrupt permeabilization of the cytoplasmic membrane to the DNA stain Sytox Orange and concomitant loss of small osmolytes, causing observable cell shrinkage, presumably due to decreased turgor pressure. This permeabilization of the cytoplasmic membrane occurs uniformly across the entire membrane, not locally, on a timescale of 5s or less. GFP gradually leaks out of the cell envelope, evidently impeded by the shrunken peptidoglycan layer. Disruption of the cell envelope by alamethicin occurs in stages, with larger and larger species permeating the envelope as time evolves over tens of minutes. Some of the observed symptoms are consistent with the formation of barrel-stave pores, but the data do not rule out "chaotic pore" or "carpet" mechanisms. We contrast the effects of alamethicin and the human cathelicidin LL-37 on B. subtilis.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2016

Date

2016-01-08T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.bbamem.2016.01.003

Citations

26

References

36