Abstract

Superresolution, single-particle tracking reveals effects of the cationic antimicrobial peptide LL-37 on the Escherichia coli cytoplasm. Seconds after LL-37 penetrates the cytoplasmic membrane, the chromosomal DNA becomes rigidified on a length scale of ∼30 nm, evidenced by the loss of jiggling motion of specific DNA markers. The diffusive motion of a subset of ribosomes is also frozen. The mean diffusion coefficients of the DNA-binding protein HU and the nonendogenous protein Kaede decrease twofold. Roughly 108 LL-37 copies flood the cell (mean concentration ∼90 mM). Much of the LL-37 remains bound within the cell after extensive rinsing with fresh growth medium. Growth never recovers. The results suggest that the high concentration of adsorbed polycationic peptides forms a dense network of noncovalent, electrostatic linkages within the chromosomal DNA and among 70S-polysomes. The bacterial cytoplasm comprises a concentrated collection of biopolymers that are predominantly polyanionic (e.g., DNA, ribosomes, RNA, and most globular proteins). In normal cells, this provides a kind of electrostatic lubrication, enabling facile diffusion despite high biopolymer volume fraction. However, this same polyanionic nature renders the cytoplasm susceptible to massive adsorption of polycationic agents once penetration of the membranes occurs. If this phenomenon proves widespread across cationic agents and bacterial species, it will help explain why resistance to antimicrobial peptides develops only slowly. The results suggest two design criteria for polycationic peptides that efficiently kill gram-negative bacteria: facile penetration of the outer membrane and the ability to alter the cytoplasm by electrostatically linking double-stranded DNA and 70S-polysomes.

Highlights

  • Superresolution, single-particle tracking reveals effects of the cationic antimicrobial peptide LL-37 on the Escherichia coli cytoplasm

  • We suggest that strong binding between polycationic LL-37 and polyanionic chromosomal DNA and ribosomes has produced a dense network of pseudo-cross-links that rigidifies the cytoplasm and inhibits proper movement of DNA, of ribosomes, and of globular proteins

  • In work related to the present study, the Barron laboratory recently carried out a transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and X-ray tomography study of the structural effects of LL-37 and various cationic peptoids within the E. coli cytoplasm [9]

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Summary

Introduction

Superresolution, single-particle tracking reveals effects of the cationic antimicrobial peptide LL-37 on the Escherichia coli cytoplasm. The bacterial cytoplasm comprises a concentrated collection of biopolymers that are predominantly polyanionic (e.g., DNA, ribosomes, RNA, and most globular proteins) In normal cells, this provides a kind of electrostatic lubrication, enabling facile diffusion despite high biopolymer volume fraction. This provides a kind of electrostatic lubrication, enabling facile diffusion despite high biopolymer volume fraction This same polyanionic nature renders the cytoplasm susceptible to massive adsorption of polycationic agents once penetration of the membranes occurs. Recent work has employed imaging methodologies such as transmission electron microscopy (TEM) [8], immunofluorescence, and soft X-ray tomography [9] to directly observe the effects of AMPs on single cells Those studies necessarily involve fixation and permeabilization of the cells, and they are typically carried out at a single time point after addition of the AMP. Bulk methods can distinguish disruption of the outer membrane (OM) from disruption of the cytoplasmic membrane (CM) using

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