a 2023

Membrane adsorption enhances translocation of antimicrobial peptide buforin 2

KHODAM HAZRATI, Mehrnoosh and Robert VÁCHA

Basic information

Original name

Membrane adsorption enhances translocation of antimicrobial peptide buforin 2

Name in Czech

Membranová adsorpce zvyšuje translokaci antimikrobiálního peptidu buforin 2

Authors

KHODAM HAZRATI, Mehrnoosh and Robert VÁCHA

Edition

EBSA Congress 2023, 2023

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Konferenční abstrakta

Country of publisher

Sweden

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Organization

Středoevropský technologický institut – Repository – Repository

Keywords (in Czech)

antimikrobiální peptidy; buforin 2; intracelulární interakce; buforin 2 membránová translokace

Keywords in English

antimicrobial peptides; buforin 2; intracelular interactions; buforin 2 membrane translocation

Links

LX22NPO5103, research and development project.
Changed: 15/11/2023 03:33, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

V originále

Antibiotic resistance has been identified as one of the top three threats to human public health. Promising alternatives to antibiotics are antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) that can selectively kill bacterial cells. Buforin 2 (BF2) is an AMP that kills bacteria via intracellular interactions rather than membrane lysis. BF2 membrane translocation is known to be independent of any cellular receptor because BF2 can readily enter bacterial cells and vesicles that contain only lipids in their membrane. However, the free energy barrier for BF2 translocation across a symmetric membrane suggests a non-spontaneous process, demonstrating our poor understanding of the molecular details of how BF2 crosses biological membranes. Here, we show that inducing membrane asymmetry by BF2 adsorption on one leaflet significantly enhances BF2 translocation across bilayers, indicating that membrane asymmetry may act as a driving force for membrane transport. Our results shed light on the crowding effect of AMP on antibacterial activity and are expected to be helpful in the design of new AMPs.

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