The case for class II bacteriocins: A biophysical approach using “suicide probes” in receptor-free hosts to study their mechanism of action
Class II bacteriocins are unmodified membrane-active peptides that act over a narrow spectrum of target bacteria. They bind a specific receptor protein on the membrane to form a pore, leading to membrane permeabilization and cell death. However, little is known about the molecular events triggering...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biochimie 2019-10, Vol.165, p.183-195 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Class II bacteriocins are unmodified membrane-active peptides that act over a narrow spectrum of target bacteria. They bind a specific receptor protein on the membrane to form a pore, leading to membrane permeabilization and cell death. However, little is known about the molecular events triggering the pore formation after the bacteriocin recognizes the receptor. It is not clear yet if the pore is the same receptor forced into an open conformation or if the pore results from the bacteriocin insertion and oligomeric assembly in the lipid bilayer. In order to reveal which model is more suitable to explain the toxicity mechanism, in this work we use chimeric peptides, resulting from the fusion of the bitopic membrane protein EtpM with different class II bacteriocins: enterocin CRL35, pediocin PA-1 and microcin V. E. coli strains lacking the specific receptors for these bacteriocins were chosen as expression hosts. As these constructs display a lethal effect when they are heterologously expressed, they are called “suicide probes”. The results suggest that, indeed, the specific receptor would act as a docking molecule more than as a structural piece of the pore, as long as the bacteriocin is somehow anchored to the membrane. These set of chimeric peptides also represent an in vivo system that allows to study the interaction of the bacteriocins with real bacterial membranes, instead of model membranes. Hence, the effects of these suicide probes in membrane fluidity and transmembrane potential were also assessed, using fluorescence spectroscopy. The data show that the different suicide probes are able to increase phospholipid order and depolarize the membranes of receptor-free bacterial cells.
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•Suicide probes are hybrid peptides aimed to study bacteriocins mechanism of action.•Suicide probes are toxic for E. coli even in the absence of the specific receptor.•The receptor would act as an anchor allowing the bacteriocin assembly in the bilayer.•Membrane composition might be an important factor for bacteriocin activity.•Bacteriocins insertion affects bacterial membrane fluidity and membrane potential. |
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ISSN: | 0300-9084 1638-6183 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.biochi.2019.07.024 |