Lipid headgroup discrimination by antimicrobial peptide LL-37: insight into mechanism of action.
Neville. Frances F; Cahuzac. Marjolaine M; Konovalov. Oleg O; Ishitsuka. Yuji Y; Lee. Ka Yee C KY; Kuzmenko. Ivan I; Kale. Girish M GM; Gidalevitz. David D
Key Findings
- LL‑37 readily inserts into and disrupts DPPG (bacterial‑like) lipid monolayers
- DPPC and DPPE (human‑like) monolayers are largely unchanged by LL‑37, indicating low hemolytic risk
- X‑ray and microscopy data confirm structural damage only in bacterial‑mimic membranes
Practical Outcomes
- LL‑37 appears to be a selective antimicrobial that could be useful for topical or surface applications where you want to kill bacteria but avoid harming human cells. However, the work is mechanistic and doesn’t give dosage or delivery guidance, so more research is needed before safe, effective protocols can be recommended for personal use.
Summary
The study shows that the human peptide LL‑37 can poke into and break apart membranes that look like bacterial cells while leaving membranes that look like human cells untouched, meaning it kills bacteria without damaging our own cells.
Abstract
Interaction of the human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 with lipid monolayers has been investigated by a range of complementary techniques including pressure-area isotherms, insertion assay, epifluorescence microscopy, and synchrotron x-ray scattering, to analyze its mechanism of action. Lipid monolayers were formed at the air-liquid interface to mimic the surface of the bacterial cell wall and the outer leaflet of erythrocyte cell membrane by using phosphatidylglycerol (DPPG), phosphatidylcholine (DPPC), and phosphatidylethanolamine (DPPE) lipids. LL-37 is found to readily insert into DPPG monolayers, disrupting their structure and thus indicating bactericidal action. In contrast, DPPC and DPPE monolayers remained virtually unaffected by LL-37, demonstrating its nonhemolytic activity and lipid discrimination. Specular x-ray reflectivity data yielded considerable differences in layer thickness and electron-density profile after addition of the peptide to DPPG monolayers, but little change was seen after peptide injection when probing monolayers composed of DPPC and DPPE. Grazing incidence x-ray diffraction demonstrated significant peptide insertion and lateral packing order disruption of the DPPG monolayer by LL-37 insertion. Epifluorescence microscopy data support these findings.
Study Information
pubmed
2005
2005-11-18T00:00:00.000Z
10.1529/biophysj.105.067595