Physiologically-relevant modes of membrane interactions by the human antimicrobial peptide, LL-37, revealed by SFG experiments.
Ding. Bei B; Soblosky. Lauren L; Nguyen. Khoi K; Geng. Junqing J; Yu. Xinglong X; Ramamoorthy. Ayyalusamy A; Chen. Zhan Z
Key Findings
- SFG spectroscopy can track LL‑37‑membrane interactions at low, physiologically‑relevant concentrations
- LL‑37’s binding orientation and aggregation change with different lipid compositions
- Cholesterol in the membrane blocks LL‑37‑induced membrane permeation
Practical Outcomes
- LL‑37 may work better against microbes when target cells have low cholesterol, suggesting membrane composition matters for its effectiveness. For DIY biohackers, this hints that cholesterol‑rich environments could blunt LL‑37’s antimicrobial action, but the study doesn’t give dosing or direct usage guidelines.
Summary
Scientists used a special light technique to watch how the natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 sticks to and disrupts cell membranes at realistic low levels. They found that the way LL‑37 interacts depends on the types of fats in the membrane, and that cholesterol makes it harder for the peptide to punch holes in the membrane.
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) could become the next generation antibiotic compounds which can overcome bacterial resistance by disrupting cell membranes and it is essential to determine the factors underlying its mechanism of action. Although high-resolution NMR and other biological studies have provided valuable insights, it has been a major challenge to follow the AMP-membrane interactions at physiologically-relevant low peptide concentrations. In this study, we demonstrate a novel approach to overcome this major limitation by performing Sum Frequency Generation (SFG) vibrational spectroscopic experiments on lipid bilayers containing an AMP, LL-37. Our results demonstrate the power of SFG to study non-linear helical peptides and also infer that lipid-peptide interaction and the peptide orientation depend on the lipid membrane composition. The observed SFG signal changes capture the aggregating process of LL-37 on membrane. In addition, our SFG results on cholesterol-containing lipid bilayers indicate the inhibition effect of cholesterol on peptide-induced membrane permeation process.
Study Information
pubmed
2013
2013-05-16T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/srep01854
65
40