Antimicrobial Peptide-Driven Colloidal Transformations in Liquid-Crystalline Nanocarriers.
Gontsarik. Mark M; Buhmann. Matthias T MT; Yaghmur. Anan A; Ren. Qun Q; Maniura-Weber. Katharina K; Salentinig. Stefan S
Key Findings
- LL-37 can be incorporated into bicontinuous cubic phase nanocarriers (cubosomes).
- Increasing LL-37 concentration triggers predictable phase changes: from cubic to sponge, lamellar, and micelle structures.
- LL-37‑loaded nanocarriers retain strong bactericidal activity against Escherichia coli in vitro.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY biohackers, the study suggests that sophisticated lipid nanocarriers could boost the effectiveness of antimicrobial peptides like LL-37, but the formulation methods are still lab‑grade and not ready for home use. It mainly provides a proof‑of‑concept that could eventually lead to more stable, targeted peptide supplements, pending further development.
Summary
Scientists mixed the natural antimicrobial peptide LL-37 with tiny, self‑assembling lipid particles called cubosomes. They found that LL-37 fits into these particles and changes their shape depending on how much peptide is added, while still killing E. coli bacteria. The work shows how the peptide’s structure and the carrier’s structure are linked, which could help design better delivery systems in the future.
Abstract
Designing efficient colloidal systems for the delivery of membrane active antimicrobial peptides requires in-depth understanding of their structural and morphological characteristics. Using dispersions of inverted type bicontinuous cubic phase (cubosomes), we examine the effect of integrating the amphiphilic peptide LL-37 at different concentrations on the self-assembled structure and evaluate its bactericidal ability against Escherichia coli. Small-angle X-ray scattering, dynamic light scattering, and cryogenic transmission electron microscopy show that LL-37 integrates into the bicontinuous cubic structure, inducing colloidal transformations to sponge and lamellar phases and micelles in a concentration-dependent manner. These investigations, together with in vitro evaluation studies using a clinically relevant bacterial strain, established the composition-nanostructure-activity relationship that can guide the design of new nanocarriers for antimicrobial peptides and may provide essential knowledge on the mechanisms underlying the bacterial membrane disruption with peptide-loaded nanostructures.
Study Information
pubmed
2016
2016-08-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.1021/acs.jpclett.6b01622
70
38