| Literature DB >> 33194788 |
Ann-Britt Schäfer1, Michaela Wenzel1.
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are a promising alternative to classical antibiotics in the fight against multi-resistant bacteria. They are produced by organisms from all domains of life and constitute a nearly universal defense mechanism against infectious agents. No drug can be approved without information about its mechanism of action. In order to use them in a clinical setting, it is pivotal to understand how AMPs work. While many pore-forming AMPs are well-characterized in model membrane systems, non-pore-forming peptides are often poorly understood. Moreover, there is evidence that pore formation may not happen or not play a role in vivo. It is therefore imperative to study how AMPs interact with their targets in vivo and consequently kill microorganisms. This has been difficult in the past, since established methods did not provide much mechanistic detail. Especially, methods to study membrane-active compounds have been scarce. Recent advances, in particular in microscopy technology and cell biological labeling techniques, now allow studying mechanisms of AMPs in unprecedented detail. This review gives an overview of available in vivo methods to investigate the antibacterial mechanisms of AMPs. In addition to classical mode of action classification assays, we discuss global profiling techniques, such as genomic and proteomic approaches, as well as bacterial cytological profiling and other cell biological assays. We cover approaches to determine the effects of AMPs on cell morphology, outer membrane, cell wall, and inner membrane properties, cellular macromolecules, and protein targets. We particularly expand on methods to examine cytoplasmic membrane parameters, such as composition, thickness, organization, fluidity, potential, and the functionality of membrane-associated processes. This review aims to provide a guide for researchers, who seek a broad overview of the available methodology to study the mechanisms of AMPs in living bacteria.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotics; antimicrobial peptides; membranes; microscopy; mode of action
Year: 2020 PMID: 33194788 PMCID: PMC7604286 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2020.540898
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Overview of different AMPs and antimicrobial proteins and their modes of action.
| Daptomycin | Cyclic lipopeptide | Inserts into fluid membrane microdomains that harbor cell envelope synthesis complexes; inhibits cell wall and membrane synthesis by displacing the MurG and PlsX proteins; binds phosphatidylglycerol and undecaprenyl-bound cell wall intermediates | Müller et al., |
| Polymyxin B | Cyclic lipopeptide | Binds to lipopolysaccharides and permeabilizes the outer membrane; integrates into and permeabilizes the cytoplasmic membrane; inhibits respiration | Vaara, |
| Surfactin | Cyclic lipopeptide | Membrane permeabilization; local destabilization of membrane packing at low concentrations, detergent-like membrane solubilization at high concentrations | Carrillo et al., |
| Bacitracin | Cyclic peptide | Binds to undecaprenylphosphate and leads to inhibition of wall teichoic acid and lipid II synthesis | Ruhr et al., |
| Gramicidin S | Cyclic beta-sheet peptide | Induces large-scale membrane phase separation and delocalizes peripheral membrane proteins involved in cell division and cell envelope synthesis | Wenzel et al., |
| Tyrocidine A | Cyclic beta-sheet peptide | Induces membrane phase separation and forms large transmembrane pores; interferes with DNA-binding proteins and probably induces DNA damage | Ristow et al., |
| Theta-defensin | Cyclic beta-sheet peptide | Membrane interaction of theta defensin leads to deregulation of autolytic enzymes and indices autolysis | Wilmes et al., |
| MP196 | RW-rich, cationic antimicrobial peptide (CAMP) | Disturbs membrane organization and delocalizes cytochrome c, MurG, and MinD, resulting in inhibition of respiration, cell wall synthesis, and cell division | Wenzel et al., |
| cWFW | RW-rich, cyclic CAMP | Separates membrane lipids into fluid and rigid domains, resulting in separation of integral and peripheral membrane proteins in the respective domains, in turn leading to separation of multiprotein complexes | Scheinpflug et al., |
| LL-37 | Alpha-helical CAMP | Membrane disruption by carpet mechanism | Kościuczuk et al., |
| Aurein 2.1 | Alpha-helical CAMP | Forms cation-selective transmembrane pores | Cheng et al., |
| Gramicidin A | Alpha-helical peptide | Na+/K+ channel ionophore | Duax et al., |
| Magainin | Alpha-helical peptide | Forms a toroidal membrane pore | Ludtke et al., |
| Alamethicin | Alpha-helical peptaibol | Forms voltage-dependent ion channels | Leitgeb et al., |
| Vancomycin | Glycopeptide | Inhibits cell wall synthesis by binding to the D-Ala-D-Ala motif of lipid II | Schneider and Sahl, |
| Nisin | Type A lantibiotic | Binds to lipid II and uses it as a docking molecule to form a transmembrane pore | Breukink et al., |
| Mersacidin | Type B lantibiotic | Inhibits cell wall synthesis by binding lipid II | Brötz et al., |
| hBD3 | Beta defensin | Interacts with membranes and displays low affinity for lipid II; probably localizes to sites of active cell wall synthesis and sterically hinders the interaction of protein complexes | Sass et al., |
| Plectasin | Fungal defensin | Inhibits cell wall synthesis by binding to lipid II | Schneider et al., |
| Microcin | Lasso peptide | Depolarizes bacterial membranes, stabilizes gel phase in bacterial membrane mimics, RNA polymerase may be an additional target | Delgado et al., |
| Valinomycin | Depsipeptide | Potassium carrier ionophore | Duax et al., |
| Teixobactin | Macrocyclic depsipeptide | Inhibits cell wall synthesis by binding bactoprenol-coupled cell wall precursors | Ling et al., |
| ADEP | Acyldepsipeptide | Deregulates the ClpP protease, leading to uncontrolled proteolysis of substrates like FtsZ, inhibiting cell division | Brötz-Oesterhelt et al., |
| Lysozyme | Antibacterial protein | Lyses the peptidoglycan cell wall by hydrolyzing glycosidic bonds | Aminlari et al., |
| Actinonin | Peptidomimetic | Inhibits peptide deformylase leading to accumulation of formyl-methionine-capped proteins | Chen et al., |
Examples of reporter gene fusions commonly used to identify antibiotic mechanisms.
| Luciferase | Inhibition of translation | Wenzel et al., | ||
| Luciferase | Inhibition of fatty acid synthesis | Hutter et al., | ||
| Luciferase | Inhibition of fatty acid synthesis | Hutter et al., | ||
| Luciferase | Inhibition of transcription | Wenzel et al., | ||
| Luciferase | Inhibition of cell wall synthesis | Wenzel et al., | ||
| Luciferase | Inhibition of protein synthesis | Urban et al., | ||
| Luciferase | DNA damage | Wenzel et al., | ||
| Luciferase | Inhibition of cell wall synthesis | Hutter et al., | ||
| Luciferase | Cell wall stress | Hutter et al., | ||
| Luciferase | Inhibition of protein synthesis | Hutter et al., | ||
| Luciferase | Inhibition of RNA synthesis | Urban et al., | ||
| β-galactosidase | Inhibition of cell wall synthesis | Mondal et al., | ||
| β-galactosidase | Protein misfolding | Bianchi, | ||
| β-galactosidase | Protein misfolding | Bianchi, | ||
| β-galactosidase | Extracytoplasmic stress | Bianchi, | ||
| β-alactosidase | Extracytoplasmic stress | Bianchi, |
Figure 1Peptidoglycan synthesis as antibiotic target. (A) Overview of peptidoglycan synthesis in S. aureus and antibiotics targeting this pathway (modified from Schneider and Sahl, 2010). Peptidoglycan synthesis is a common target of peptide antibiotics. With the exception of tunicamycin and fosfomycin, all antibiotics in this figure are peptide-based. (B) Acetic acid/methanol fixation of B. subtilis. Inhibition of cell wall synthesis leads to extrusion of the protoplast through breaches in the peptidoglycan layer.
Figure 2Incorporation of fluorescent cell wall labels. (A) Structures of different fluorescently labeled amino acids (FDAAs) with different spectral properties (HADA: blue, NADA: green, YADA: yellow, TADA: red) (Kuru et al., 2015; Hsu et al., 2017). (B) FDAAs mimic the peptide side chain of the peptidoglycan precursor and are incorporated into the cell wall by bacterial enzymes (modified from Hsu et al., 2017). (C) Incorporation of fluorescent tags into the peptidoglycan layer by sortase-mediated labeling. The fluorescent tag is coupled to a membrane protein through a linker that contains a signal peptide sequence that is cleaved by the sortase enzyme. The free tag can then bind lipid II through a nucleophilic attack. This results in a tagged lipid II, which is incorporated into the cell wall by penicillin-binding proteins (Hendrickx et al., 2011).
Figure 3Assays for membrane depolarization. (A) Membrane depolarization assay with DisC3(5). This self-quenching dye inserts into polarized membranes and is released upon depolarization leading to an increased fluorescent signal. (B) Membrane potential assay with DiBAC4(3). This dye does not insert into polarized membranes and is only self-quenching at very high concentrations. Upon depolarization it inserts into the membrane resulting in an increased fluorescence signal (te Winkel et al., 2016). (C) Depolarization assay with the GFP-MinD reporter strain. MinD normally localizes at the cell poles and the cell division plane. Membrane depolarization, here by tyrocidine A, leads to disturbance of this regular pattern and a spotty GFP signal over the whole cell membrane and partial dislocation of the protein into the cytosol (Strahl and Hamoen, 2010).
Selection of fluorescence dyes applied in mode of action experiments.
| NPN | Outer membrane permeability | Loh et al., |
| ANS | Outer membrane permeability | Schved et al., |
| Bocillin | Penicillin-binding proteins | Pogliano et al., |
| Van-FL | Lipid II | Pogliano et al., |
| HADA | Sites of active cell wall synthesis | Schirner et al., |
| NADA | Sites of active cell wall synthesis | Montón Silva et al., |
| Mitotracker green (MTG) | General membrane dye | Saeloh et al., |
| Nile red | General membrane dye | Saeloh et al., |
| FM5-95 | General membrane dye | Müller et al., |
| FM4-64 | General membrane dye | Pogliano et al., |
| NAO | Negatively charged phospholipids | Pogmore et al., |
| DiIC12 | Fluid membrane microdomains | Wenzel et al., |
| DPH | Membrane fluidity | Bessa et al., |
| Laurdan | Membrane fluidity | Wenzel et al., |
| DiSC3(5) | Membrane potential | te Winkel et al., |
| DiBAC4(3) | Membrane potential | te Winkel et al., |
| APG-2 | Potassium flux | Saeloh et al., |
| Propidium iodide | Pores | Jiang et al., |
| Sytox green | Pores | Barns and Weisshaar, |
| BCECF | pH | Strahl and Hamoen, |
| Resazurin | Respiratory chain activity | Saeloh et al., |
| INT | Respiratory chain activity | Dutton et al., |
| CTC | Respiratory chain activity | Rodriguez et al., |
| CellRox | Reactive oxygen species | Wenzel et al., |
| Oxyburst green | Reactive oxygen species | Surewaard and Kubes, |
| DCFH-DA | Reactive oxygen species | Arakha et al., |
| DAPI | DNA | Nonejuie et al., |
| SYTO9 | DNA | Krychowiak et al., |
| SYTO RNAselect | RNA | Bakshi et al., |
This list is not exhaustive and only includes dyes that have been used for antibiotic mode of action studies in bacteria. Note that some of these dyes have several derivatives covering different wavelengths (e.g., SYTO dyes) or having different membrane-penetrating properties (e.g., APG dyes).
Figure 4Tools for microscopic examination of membrane domains of different fluidity. (A) Laurdan is a fluorescent membrane dye that exhibits a fluidity-dependent fluorescence emission shift (schematic not to scale). (B) Laurdan can be used in spectroscopic assays allowing recording of the kinetics of overall membrane fluidity changes. The cyclic beta-sheet peptide tyrocidine A causes rapid membrane rigidification. (C) Laurdan can also be visualized under the microscope and a GP scale can be created using ImageJ. Tyrocidine-induced membrane domains appear much more fluid (red) than the rest membrane (green). (D) DiIC12 preferentially inserts into fluid membrane environments and is therefore well-suited to detect RIFs and other fluid membrane domains (schematic not to scale). (E) Treatment with tyrocidine A disturbs the distribution of RIFs and induces their fusion into large fluid domains. (F,G) Flotillins are reporters for rigid membrane domains (lipid rafts). Delocalization of FloA (F) and FloT (G) by tyrocidine A indicates that this peptide affects membrane domains.
Proteins commonly used for bacterial cytological profiling and their localization in B. subtilis (Müller et al., 2016b; Saeloh et al., 2018; Wenzel et al., 2018a).
| HbsU | Regulation of nucleoid compaction | Chromosome compaction | |
| ParB | Chromosome positioning before septation | DNA replication | |
| PolC | Alpha-subunit of the DNA polymerase III | DNA replication | |
| DnaN | Beta-subunit of the DNA polymerase III | DNA replication and repair | |
| RecA | Homologous recombination and DNA repair | DNA damage | |
| RpoC | Beta-subunit of the RNA polymerase | RNA synthesis | |
| RpsB | Ribosomal protein | Protein synthesis | |
| PgsA | Biosynthesis of phospholipids | Phospholipid synthesis | |
| PlsX | Phospholipid synthase | Phospholipid synthesis | |
| FloA | Flotillin | Membrane domains | |
| FloT | Flotillin | Membrane domains | |
| SdhA | Succinate dehydrogenase | Membrane-bound energy generation | |
| AtpA | ATP synthase | Membrane invagination | |
| DivIVA | Cell division regulation | Cell division | |
| MinD | Cell division regulation | Cell division | |
| FtsA | Membrane anchor of the cell division protein FtsZ | Cell division | |
| FtsZ | Major cell division protein, forms the Z-ring | Cell division | |
| MreB | Cell shape-determining protein | Cytoskeleton | |
| MreC | Cell shape-determining protein | Cytoskeleton | |
| MreD | Cell shape-determining protein | Cytoskeleton | |
| MurG | Lipid II synthase | Cell wall synthesis | |
| MraY | Lipid I synthase | Cell wall synthesis | |
| PBP2B | Penicillin-binding protein 2B | Cell wall synthesis | |
| PonA | Penicillin-binding protein 1A/1B | Cell wall synthesis | |
| FtsW | Peptidoglycan glycosyltransferase | Cell wall synthesis |
Figure 5Microscopic assays for antibiotic effects on the nucleoid. Cells were treated with tyrocidine A, which has been described to bind to DNA (Ristow et al., 1975). DAPI is used as a DNA dye and shows clear chromosome compaction after treatment. DnaN and ParB are DNA-binding proteins and reporters for impaired replication. RecA is a reporter for DNA damage. RpoC is a reporter for impaired RNA synthesis. All these proteins showed a clear change in their localization pattern after exposure to tyrocidine A. RpsB is a ribosomal protein that is used as reporter for impaired protein synthesis, which was included as a negative control and showed no effect.