Induction of the Cpx envelope stress pathway contributes to Escherichia coli tolerance to antimicrobial peptides.
Audrain. Bianca B; Ferrières. Lionel L; Zairi. Amira A; Soubigou. Guillaume G; Dobson. Curtis C; Coppée. Jean-Yves JY; Beloin. Christophe C; Ghigo. Jean-Marc JM
Key Findings
- Antimicrobial peptides activate E. coli envelope stress pathways (RcsCDB, CpxAR, ÏE).
- The CpxAR twoâcomponent system is a key driver of bacterial tolerance to peptides such as LLâ37, polymyxin B, and melittin.
- Multiple peptides, not just the new ApoEdpLâW, induce the same stress response, suggesting a common bacterial defense mechanism.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers considering antimicrobial peptides as health tools, the research warns that bacteria can quickly develop tolerance via the CpxAR pathway, potentially reducing longâterm effectiveness. It suggests caution in using these peptides as standâalone antimicrobials and highlights the need for strategies that avoid triggering bacterial stress responses.
Summary
The study shows that when E. coli bacteria are exposed to antimicrobial peptides like LLâ37, they turn on internal stress systems (especially the CpxAR pathway) that help them survive the attack. This bacterial response isnât unique to one peptide â several different antimicrobial peptides trigger the same defense. The activation of CpxAR directly makes the bacteria more tolerant to these peptides.
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides produced by multicellular organisms as part of their innate system of defense against microorganisms are currently considered potential alternatives to conventional antibiotics in case of infection by multiresistant bacteria. However, while the mode of action of antimicrobial peptides is relatively well described, resistance mechanisms potentially induced or selected by these peptides are still poorly understood. In this work, we studied the mechanisms of action and resistance potentially induced by ApoEdpL-W, a new antimicrobial peptide derived from human apolipoprotein E. Investigation of the genetic response of Escherichia coli upon exposure to sublethal concentrations of ApoEdpL-W revealed that this antimicrobial peptide triggers activation of RcsCDB, CpxAR, and σ(E) envelope stress pathways. This genetic response is not restricted to ApoEdpL-W, since several other antimicrobial peptides, including polymyxin B, melittin, LL-37, and modified S4 dermaseptin, also activate several E. coli envelope stress pathways. Finally, we demonstrate that induction of the CpxAR two-component system directly contributes to E. coli tolerance toward ApoEdpL-W, polymyxin B, and melittin. These results therefore show that E. coli senses and responds to different antimicrobial peptides by activation of the CpxAR pathway. While this study further extends the understanding of the array of peptide-induced stress signaling systems, it also provides insight into the contribution of Cpx envelope stress pathway to E. coli tolerance to antimicrobial peptides.
Study Information
pubmed
2013
2013-10-04T00:00:00.000Z
10.1128/aem.02593-13