| Literature DB >> 27877159 |
Joshua Ravensdale1, Zachary Wong1, Frances O'Brien2, Keith Gregg1.
Abstract
Clinical application of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), as with conventional antibiotics, may be compromised by the development of bacterial resistance. This study investigated AMP resistance in methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus, including aspects related to the resilience of the resistant bacteria toward the peptides, the stability of resistance when selection pressures are removed, and whether resistance can be overcome by using the peptides with other membrane-permeabilising agents. Genotypically variant strains of S. aureus became equally resistant to the antibacterial peptides melittin and bac8c when grown in sub-lethal concentrations. Subculture of a melittin-resistant strain without melittin for 8 days lowered the minimal lethal concentration of the peptide from 170 μg ml-1 to 30 μg ml-1. Growth for 24 h in 12 μg ml-1 melittin restored the MLC to 100 μg ml-1. Flow cytometry analysis of cationic fluorophore binding to melittin-naïve and melittin-resistant bacteria revealed that resistance coincided with decreased binding of cationic molecules, suggesting a reduction in nett negative charge on the membrane. Melittin was haemolytic at low concentrations but the truncated analog of melittin, mel12-26, was confirmed to lack haemolytic activity. Although a previous report found that mel12-26 retained full bactericidal activity, we found it to lack significant activity when added to culture medium. However, electroporation in the presence of 50 μg ml-1 of mel12-26, killed 99.3% of the bacteria. Similarly, using a low concentration of the non-ionic detergent Triton X-100 to permeabilize bacteria to mel12-26 markedly increased its bactericidal activity. The observation that bactericidal activity of the non-membranolytic peptide mel12-26 was enhanced when the bacterial membrane was permeablized by detergents or electroporation, suggests that its principal mechanism in reducing bacterial survival may be through interaction with intracellular organelles or processes. Additionally, our results showed that the haemolytic peptide bac8c, had increased antibacterial activity at non-haemolytic concentrations when used with membrane-permeabilizing surfactants.Entities:
Keywords: Bac8c; MRSA; Melittin; antimicrobial peptides resistance; intracellular antimicrobial activity
Year: 2016 PMID: 27877159 PMCID: PMC5099250 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.01745
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Minimum lethal concentration of melittin, mel12-26, and bac8c for MRSA strains in bactopeptone media.
| Peptide | MRSA strain | MLC (μg ml-1) |
|---|---|---|
| Melittin | WBG 8287 | 5 |
| W17S | 5 | |
| Aus3 | 5 | |
| BB | 5 | |
| Mel12-26 | WBG 8287 | >130a |
| Bac8c | WBG 8287 | 7 |
| W17S | 80 | |
| Aus3 | 80 | |
Minimal lethal concentration (MLC) of melittin and bac8c against MRSA in different media, following induced resistance to the peptides in bactopeptone medium.
| MRSA Strain | Culture medium | Melittin MLC (μg ml-1) | Bac8c MLC (μg ml-1) |
|---|---|---|---|
| WBG 8287 | Bactopeptone | 170 | 160 |
| PBa | 3 | ND | |
| PB + 8 g l-1 NaCl | 5 | ND | |
| PB + 15 g l-1 NaCl | 7 | ND | |
| W17S | Bactopeptone | 150 | 170 |
| Aus3 | Bactopeptone | 160 | 150 |
| BB | Bactopeptone | 150 | ND |
Minimum lethal concentrations of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) for resistant WBG 8287 and reversion/recovery populations.
| Population | MLC μg ml-1 |
|---|---|
| Melittin-resistant | 170 |
| Melittin-reversion | 30 |
| Melittin-recovery | 100 |
| Bac8c-resistant | 160 |
| Bac8c-reversion | 110 |
Minimum lethal concentration of AMPs against WBG 8287 in bactopeptone with Triton X-100.
| Peptide | BPa (μg ml-1) | BP + 0.005% TX-100b (μg ml-1) | BP + 0.1% TX-100 (μg ml-1) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Melittin | 5 | 3.5 ± 0.55 | 2.75 ± 0.27 |
| Mel12-26 | >130 | 80 ± 0.00 | 25 ± 0.00 |
| Bac8c | 7 | 4.7 ± 0.52 | 2.6 ± 0.49 |