Publication | Open Access
Impact of Self-Assembly Properties on Antibacterial Activity of Short Acyl-Lysine Oligomers
61
Citations
39
References
2008
Year
Supramolecular AssemblyBioorganic ChemistryEngineeringMolecular Self-assemblyAntibacterial ActivityLipopeptide AntibioticsSelf-assembly PropertiesProtein Phase SeparationChemical BiologyAnalogous OaksShort Acyl-lysine OligomersAntimicrobial ResistanceProtein ChemistryBiochemistryAntibacterial AgentAntimicrobial CompoundMolecular EngineeringBiomolecular EngineeringHydrophobic OaksNatural SciencesSelf-assemblyProtein EngineeringAmphiphilic System
We investigated both the structural and functional consequences of modifying the hydrophobic, lipopeptide-mimetic oligo-acyl-lysine (OAK) N(alpha)-hexadecanoyl-l-lysyl-l-lysyl-aminododecanoyl-l-lysyl-amide (c(16)KKc(12)K) to its unsaturated analog hexadecenoyl-KKc(12)K [c(16(omega7))KKc(12)K]. Despite similar tendencies for self-assembly in solution (critical aggregation concentrations, approximately 10 muM), the analogous OAKs displayed dissimilar antibacterial properties (e.g., bactericidal kinetics taking minutes versus hours). Diverse experimental evidence provided insight into these discrepancies: whereas c(16(omega7))KKc(12)K created wiry interconnected nanofiber networks, c(16)KKc(12)K formed both wider and stiffer fibers which displayed distinct binding properties to phospholipid membranes. Unsaturation also shifted their gel-to-liquid transition temperatures and altered their light-scattering properties, suggesting the disassembly of c(16(omega7))KKc(12)K in the presence of bacteria. Collectively, the data indicated that the higher efficiency in interfering with bacterial viability emanated from a wobbly packing imposed by a single double bond. This suggests that similar strategies might improve hydrophobic OAKs and related lipopeptide antibiotics.
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