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Molecular Crowding Alters the Interactions of Polymyxin Lipopeptides within the Periplasm of E. coli : Insights from Molecular Dynamics.

Iain Peter Shand SmithConrado PedebosSyma Khalid
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2024)
The cell envelope of Gram-negative bacteria is a crowded tripartite architecture that separates the cell interior from the external environment. Two membranes encapsulate the aqueous periplasm, which contains the cell wall. Little is known about the mechanisms via which antimicrobial peptides move through the periplasm from the outer membrane to their site of action, the inner membrane. We utilize all-atom molecular dynamics to study two antimicrobial peptides, polymyxins B1 and E, within models of the E. coli periplasm crowded to different extents. In a simple chemical environment, both PMB1 and PME bind irreversibly to the cell wall. The presence of specific macromolecules leads to competition with the polymyxins for cell wall interaction sites, resulting in polymyxin dissociation from the cell wall. Chemical complexity also impacts interactions between polymyxins and Braun's lipoprotein; thus, the interaction modes of lipoprotein antibiotics within the periplasm are dependent upon the nature of the other species present.
Keyphrases
  • cell wall
  • molecular dynamics
  • density functional theory
  • single cell
  • escherichia coli
  • cell therapy
  • gram negative
  • stem cells
  • ionic liquid
  • low density lipoprotein
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • single molecule