؊1 for the wildtype peptide, and the minimum concentration for pore formation increased from the 1 nM to the 50 nM range. In contrast, peptides mutated in the flexible hinge region, e.g. [⌬N20/⌬M21]nisin, were completely inactive in the pore formation assay, but were reduced to some extent in their in vivo activity. We found the remaining in vivo activity to result from the unaltered capacity of the mutated peptide to bind to lipid II and thus to inhibit its incorporation into the peptidoglycan network. Therefore, through interaction with the membrane-bound cell wall precursor lipid II, nisin inhibits peptidoglycan synthesis and forms highly specific pores. The combination of two killing mechanisms in one molecule potentiates antibiotic activity and results in nanomolar MIC values, a strategy that may well be worth considering for the construction of novel antibiotics.The antimicrobial peptide nisin is produced by numerous strains of Lactococcus lactis and inhibits a broad range of Gram-positive bacteria (1, 2). It belongs to the lantibiotics, a group of antimicrobial peptides that is characterized by the presence of intramolecular rings formed by the thioether amino acids lanthionine and 3-methyllanthionine (3, 4). Nisin has had a long history as a potent and safe food preservative, although recent insight into the molecular mechanism of its bactericidal activity also make it interesting for biomedical applications (5, 6). Generally, the nisin-type subgroup of lantibiotics comprises elongated cationic peptides that have the capacity to adopt amphiphilic structures. Such peptides are assumed to kill microbes by disturbing the integrity of the energy-transducing membrane. Indeed, early experiments demonstrated that nisin or related lantibiotics induced rapid efflux of ions or cytoplasmic solutes such as amino acids and nucleotides. The concomitant depolarization of the cytoplasmic membrane resulted in an instant termination of all biosynthetic processes (7,8). Structural analysis in the presence of micelles indicated that the hydrophilic groups of the peptide interact with the phospholipid headgroups, and the hydrophobic side chains are immersed in the hydrophobic core of the membrane (9, 10). The wedge model as proposed by Driessen et al. (11) takes into account such structural data and proposes that the peptides insert into the membrane without losing contact with the membrane surface, resulting in the formation of a short-lived pore.Whereas the wedge model may illustrate results obtained with model membranes, a number of effects observed with intact living cells remain unexplained; in particular, the fact that nisin acts on model membranes at micromolar concentrations whereas in vivo minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) 1 values are in the nanomolar range. The discrepancies were explained by the finding that nisin and epidermin use lipid II, the bactoprenol-bound precursor of the bacterial cell wall as a docking molecule for subsequent pore formation (12). The specificity of the nisin-lipid II interaction a...
Resistance to antibiotics is increasing in some groups of clinically important pathogens. For instance, high vancomycin resistance has emerged in enterococci. Promising alternative antibiotics are the peptide antibiotics, abundant in host defense systems, which kill their targets by permeabilizing the plasma membrane. These peptides generally do not act via specific receptors and are active in the micromolar range. Here it is shown that vancomycin and the antibacterial peptide nisin Z use the same target: the membrane-anchored cell wall precursor Lipid II. Nisin combines high affinity for Lipid II with its pore-forming ability, thus causing the peptide to be highly active (in the nanomolar range).
Lipid II is a membrane-anchored cell-wall precursor that is essential for bacterial cell-wall biosynthesis. The effectiveness of targeting Lipid II as an antibacterial strategy is highlighted by the fact that it is the target for at least four different classes of antibiotic, including the clinically important glycopeptide antibiotic vancomycin. However, the growing problem of bacterial resistance to many current drugs, including vancomycin, has led to increasing interest in the therapeutic potential of other classes of compound that target Lipid II. Here, we review progress in understanding of the antibacterial activities of these compounds, which include lantibiotics, mannopeptimycins and ramoplanin, and consider factors that will be important in exploiting their potential as new treatments for bacterial infections.
The emerging antibiotics-resistance problem has underlined the urgent need for novel antimicrobial agents. Lantibiotics (lanthionine-containing antibiotics) are promising candidates to alleviate this problem. Nisin, a member of this family, has a unique pore-forming activity against bacteria. It binds to lipid II, the essential precursor of cell wall synthesis. As a result, the membrane permeabilization activity of nisin is increased by three orders of magnitude. Here we report the solution structure of the complex of nisin and lipid II. The structure shows a novel lipid II-binding motif in which the pyrophosphate moiety of lipid II is primarily coordinated by the N-terminal backbone amides of nisin via intermolecular hydrogen bonds. This cage structure provides a rationale for the conservation of the lanthionine rings among several lipid II-binding lantibiotics. The structure of the pyrophosphate cage offers a template for structure-based design of novel antibiotics.
SummaryGrowth of the meshlike peptidoglycan (PG) sacculus located between the bacterial inner and outer membranes (OM) is tightly regulated to ensure cellular integrity, maintain cell shape and orchestrate division. Cytoskeletal elements direct placement and activity of PG synthases from inside the cell but precise spatiotemporal control over this process is poorly understood. We demonstrate that PG synthases are also controlled from outside the sacculus. Two OM lipoproteins, LpoA and LpoB, are essential for the function respectively of PBP1A and PBP1B, the major E. coli bifunctional PG synthases. Each Lpo protein binds specifically to its cognate PBP and stimulates its transpeptidase activity, thereby facilitating attachment of new PG to the sacculus. LpoB shows partial septal localization and our data suggest that the LpoB-PBP1B complex contributes to OM constriction during cell division. LpoA/ LpoB and their PBP docking regions are restricted to γ-proteobacteria, providing models for niche-specific regulation of sacculus growth.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.