Outer membrane lipoprotein Lpp is Gram-negative bacterial cell surface receptor for cationic antimicrobial peptides.
Chang. Ting-Wei TW; Lin. Yu-Ming YM; Wang. Chiu-Feng CF; Liao. You-Di YD
Key Findings
- Lpp on Gram‑negative bacteria acts as a receptor for LL‑37 and similar antimicrobial peptides
- Binding of LL‑37 to Lpp leads to membrane damage and bacterial death
- The interaction is resistant to salts and divalent cations but can be blocked by anti‑Lpp antibodies
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this research confirms that LL‑37’s antibacterial action involves a specific bacterial target, which may guide the design of more effective antimicrobial formulations. However, it doesn’t provide new dosing or safety guidance for personal use, so its direct impact on health‑optimizing protocols is limited.
Summary
The study shows that a bacterial surface protein called Lpp grabs onto LL‑37 and other positively‑charged antimicrobial peptides, making the bacteria more vulnerable. This binding works even in salty conditions and isn’t stopped by common metal ions, but can be blocked with antibodies against Lpp. The findings mainly explain how LL‑37 kills certain Gram‑negative bacteria, not how it works in the human body.
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides/proteins (AMPs) are important components of the host innate defense mechanisms. Here we demonstrate that the outer membrane lipoprotein, Lpp, of Enterobacteriaceae interacts with and promotes susceptibility to the bactericidal activities of AMPs. The oligomeric Lpp was specifically recognized by several cationic α-helical AMPs, including SMAP-29, CAP-18, and LL-37; AMP-mediated bactericidal activities were blocked by anti-Lpp antibody blocking. Blebbing of the outer membrane and increase in membrane permeability occurred in association with the coordinate internalization of Lpp and AMP. Interestingly, the specific binding of AMP to Lpp was resistant to divalent cations and salts, which were able to inhibit the bactericidal activities of some AMPs. Furthermore, using His-tagged Lpp as a ligand, we retrieved several characterized AMPs, including SMAP-29 and hRNase 7, from a peptide library containing crude mammalian cell lysates. Overall, this study explores a new mechanism and target of antimicrobial activity and provides a novel method for screening of antimicrobials for use against drug-resistant bacteria.
Study Information
pubmed
2011
2011-11-14T00:00:00.000Z
10.1074/jbc.m111.290361