Issue 24, 2022

In situ nanoscale imaging reveals self-concentrating nanomolar antimicrobial pores

Abstract

Host defence peptides are critical factors of immune systems in all life forms. Considered for therapeutic development in the post-antibiotic era, these molecules rupture microbial membranes at micromolar concentrations. Here we report a self-concentrating mechanism of membrane disruption, which occurs at therapeutically more relevant nanomolar concentrations. Induced by a four-helix bacteriocin the mechanism manifests in a multi-modal disruption pattern. Using in situ atomic force microscopy we show that the pattern and its kinetic profiles remain the same in a range of nano-to-micromolar concentrations. We reveal that the bacteriocin creates its own boundaries in phospholipid bilayers in which it self-concentrates to promote transmembrane poration. The findings offer an exploitable insight into nanomolar antimicrobial mechanisms.

Graphical abstract: In situ nanoscale imaging reveals self-concentrating nanomolar antimicrobial pores

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Jan 2022
Accepted
11 May 2022
First published
11 May 2022

Nanoscale, 2022,14, 8586-8593

In situ nanoscale imaging reveals self-concentrating nanomolar antimicrobial pores

K. Hammond, J. Moffat, C. Mulcahy, B. W. Hoogenboom and M. G. Ryadnov, Nanoscale, 2022, 14, 8586 DOI: 10.1039/D2NR00434H

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