Abstract

Fluorescence microscopy enables detailed observation of the effects of the antimicrobial peptide Cecropin A on the outer membrane (OM) and cytoplasmic membrane (CM) of single E. coli cells with subsecond time resolution. Fluorescence from periplasmic GFP decays and cell growth halts when the OM is permeabilized. Fluorescence from the DNA stain Sytox Green rises when the CM is permeabilized and the stain enters the cytoplasm. The initial membrane disruptions are localized and stable. Septating cells are attacked earlier than nonseptating cells, and curved membrane surfaces are attacked in preference to cylindrical surfaces. Below a threshold bulk Cecropin A concentration, permeabilization is not observed over 30 min. Above this threshold, we observe a lag time of several minutes between Cecropin A addition and OM permeabilization and ∼30 s between OM and CM permeabilization. The long lag times and the existence of a threshold concentration for permeabilization suggest a nucleation mechanism. However, the roughly linear dependence of mean lag time on bulk peptide concentration is not easily reconciled with a nucleation step involving simultaneous insertion of multiple peptides into the bilayer. Monte Carlo simulations suggest that within seconds, the OM permeability becomes comparable to that of a pore of 100 nm diameter or of numerous small pores distributed over a similarly large area.

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