| Literature DB >> 26820390 |
Chengcheng Zhou1, Fengyan Wang2, Hui Chen2, Meng Li2, Fulin Qiao1, Zhang Liu1, Yanbo Hou1, Chunxian Wu1, Yaxun Fan1, Libing Liu2, Shu Wang2, Yilin Wang1.
Abstract
This work reports that cationic micelles formed by cationic trimeric, tetrameric, and hexameric surfactants bearing amide moieties in spacers can efficiently kill Gram-negative E. coli with a very low minimum inhibitory concentration (1.70-0.93 μM), and do not cause obvious toxicity to mammalian cells at the concentrations used. With the increase of the oligomerization degree, the antibacterial activity of the oligomeric surfactants increases, i.e., hexameric surfactant > tetrameric surfactant > trimeric surfactant. Isothermal titration microcalorimetry, scanning electron microscopy, and zeta potential results reveal that the cationic micelles interact with the cell membrane of E. coli through two processes. First, the integrity of outer membrane of E. coli is disrupted by the electrostatic interaction of the cationic ammonium groups of the surfactants with anionic groups of E. coli, resulting in loss of the barrier function of the outer membrane. The inner membrane then is disintegrated by the hydrophobic interaction of the surfactant hydrocarbon chains with the hydrophobic domains of the inner membrane, leading to the cytoplast leakage. The formation of micelles of these cationic oligomeric surfactants at very low concentration enables more efficient interaction with bacterial cell membrane, which endows the oligomeric surfactants with high antibacterial activity.Entities:
Keywords: action mechanism; antimicrobial activity; cationic micelle; hexameric surfactant; tetrameric surfactant; trimeric surfactant
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26820390 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.5b12688
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229