Conformational control of antimicrobial peptide amphiphilicity: consequences for boosting membrane interactions and antimicrobial effects of photocatalytic TiO 2 nanoparticles.
Lucrezia CaselliSebastian KöhlerDavide SchironeBen HumphreysMartin MalmstenPublished in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2024)
This study reports on the effects of conformationally controlled amphiphilicity of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) on their ability to coat TiO 2 nanoparticles (NPs) and boost the photocatalytic antimicrobial effects of such NPs. For this, TiO 2 NPs were combined with AMP EFK17 (E F KR I VQR I KD F LRNLV), displaying a disordered conformation in aqueous solution but helix formation on interaction with bacterial membranes. The membrane-bound helix is amphiphilic, with all polar and charged amino acid residues located at one side and all non-polar and hydrophobic residues on the other. In contrast, the d-enantiomer variant EFK17-d (E(d F )KR(d I )VQR(d I )KD(d F )LRNLV) is unable to form the amphiphilic helix on bacterial membrane interaction, whereas the W-residues in EFK17-W (E W KR W VQR W KD F LRNLV) boost hydrophobic interactions of the amphiphilic helix. Circular dichroism results showed the effects displayed for the free peptide, to also be present for peptide-coated TiO 2 NPs, causing peptide binding to decrease in the order EFK17-W > EFK17 > EFK17-d. Notably, the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by the TiO 2 NPs was essentially unaffected by the presence of peptide coating, for all the peptides investigated, and the coatings stabilized over hours of UV exposure. Photocatalytic membrane degradation from TiO 2 NPs coated with EFK17-W and EFK17 was promoted for bacteria-like model bilayers containing anionic phosphatidylglycerol but suppressed in mammalian-like bilayers formed by zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol. Structural aspects of these effects were further investigated by neutron reflectometry with clear variations observed between the bacteria- and mammalian-like model bilayers for the three peptides. Mirroring these results in bacteria-like model membranes, combining TiO 2 NPs with EFK17-W and EFK17, but not with non-adsorbing EFK17-d, resulted in boosted antimicrobial effects of the resulting cationic composite NPs already in darkness, effects enhanced further on UV illumination.
Keyphrases
- visible light
- aqueous solution
- molecular dynamics simulations
- quantum dots
- oxide nanoparticles
- reactive oxygen species
- amino acid
- staphylococcus aureus
- ionic liquid
- dna binding
- magnetic resonance
- dna damage
- molecular dynamics
- cell death
- emergency department
- magnetic resonance imaging
- gold nanoparticles
- computed tomography
- protein kinase
- high resolution