Publication | Open Access
Permeation of Antibiotics through Escherichia coli OmpF and OmpC Porins: Screening for Influx on a Single-Molecule Level
101
Citations
12
References
2010
Year
EngineeringPorous MembraneMembrane CharacterizationAntibiotic ResistanceSolute PermeationDrug ResistanceMembrane TransportEscherichia Coli OmpfSingle-molecule LevelSmall SizeInfection ControlMicrofluidicsAntimicrobial ResistanceBiophysicsMembrane PermeationMembrane FormationMembrane BiophysicsAntimicrobial SusceptibilityAntibioticsBioelectronicsMembrane ChannelsMicrobiologyOmpc PorinsMedicine
A chip-based automated patch-clamp technique provides an attractive biophysical tool to quantify solute permeation through membrane channels. Proteo-giant unilamellar vesicles (proteo-GUVs) were used to form a stable lipid bilayer across a micrometer-sized hole. Because of the small size and hence low capacitance of the bilayer, single-channel recordings were achieved with very low background noise. The latter allowed the characterization of the influx of 2 major classes of antibiotics-cephalosporins and fluoroquinolones-through the major Escherichia coli porins OmpF and OmpC. Analyzing the ion current fluctuations in the presence of antibiotics revealed transport properties that allowed the authors to determine the mode of permeation. The chip-based setup allows rapid solution exchange and efficient quantification of antibiotic permeation through bacterial porins on a single-molecule level.
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