Effect of a monovalent salt on the energetics of an antimicrobial-peptide: micelle dissociation.
Suvankar GhoshSunanda ChatterjeePriyadarshi SatpatiPublished in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2022)
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are promising antimicrobial and therapeutic agents. Recently, we synthesized a cationic 14 residue AMP (LL-14: LKWLKKLLKWLKKL), which showed high broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity. However, the antimicrobial activity of LL-14 was compromised in the presence of NaCl. Salt sensitivity of antimicrobial potency is one of the fundamental limitations of AMP therapeutics. Thus, understanding the thermodynamics of AMP binding to simple membrane-mimetic systems and the effect of NaCl that contributes to their stability is crucial for designing promising AMPs against microbial infection. In this work, we reported computational analysis of LL-14 binding to SDS micelles (the simplest bacterial membrane mimic) at various NaCl concentrations (0.0%, 0.5%, 1.0% w/v). The thermodynamics of LL-14 dissociation from the SDS micelles was estimated by employing steered molecular dynamics (SMD) simulation followed by umbrella sampling. The results indicated that the increase in NaCl concentration systematically disfavoured the LL-14:SDS binding, primarily by stabilizing the dissociative state ( i.e. , free LL-14 and free micelles in water). We proposed a kinetic scheme in which the salt-induced selective stabilization of the dissociative state increased the activation barrier for the peptide:micelle binding event resulting in reduced affinity. Center-of-mass pulling indicated that the interactions involving the N-terminal of the LL-14 (residues 1-6) and SDS micelle were crucial for the stability of the LL-14:SDS complex, and LL-14 underwent a conformational change (helix → unstructured) before dissociating from the SDS micelle. The observed structural features from the peptide:micelle dissociation pathway corroborate our previous simulations as well as circular dichroism (CD), and fluorescence experiments.