Bactericidal activity of amphipathic cationic antimicrobial peptides involves altering the membrane fluidity when interacting with the phospholipid bilayer
Journal article, 2018

Background: Amphipathic cationic antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) TC19 and TC84, derived from the major AMPs of human blood platelets, thrombocidins, and Bactericidal Peptide 2 (BP2), a synthetic designer peptide showed to perturb the membrane of Bacillus subtilis. We aimed to determine the means by which the three AMPs cause membrane perturbation in vivo using B. subtilis and to evaluate whether the membrane alterations are dependent on the phospholipid composition of the membrane.

Methods: Physiological analysis was employed using Alexa Fluor 488 labelled TC84, various fluorescence dyes, fluorescent microscopy techniques and structured illumination microscopy.

Results: TC19, TC84 and BP2 created extensive fluidity domains in the membrane that are permeable, thus facilitating the entering of the peptides and the leakage of the cytosol. The direct interaction of the peptides with the bilayer create the fluid domains. The changes caused in the packing of the phospholipids lead to the delocalization of membrane bound proteins, thus contributing to the cell's destruction. The changes made to the membrane appeared to be not dependent on the composition of the phospholipid bilayer.

Conclusions: The distortion caused to the fluidity of the membrane by the AMPs is sufficient to facilitate the entering of the peptides and leakage of the cytosol.

General significance: Here we show in vivo that cationic AMPs cause "membrane leaks" at the site of membrane insertion by altering the organization and fluidity of the membrane. Our findings thus contribute to the understanding of the membrane perturbation characteristic of cationic AMPs.

Membrane fluidity.

Bacillus subtilis

Essential membrane proteins

Amphipathic cationic antimicrobial peptides

Author

Soraya Omardien

University of Amsterdam

Jan W. Drijfhout

Leiden University

Frederic M. Vaz

Amsterdam University Medical Center

Michaela Wenzel

University of Amsterdam

Leendert W. Hamoen

University of Amsterdam

Sebastiaan A. J. Zaat

Amsterdam University Medical Center

Stanley Brul

University of Amsterdam

Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - Biomembranes

0005-2736 (ISSN) 1879-2642 (eISSN)

Vol. 1860 11 2404-2415

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Molecular Biology

Cell and Molecular Biology

Cell Biology

Microbiology

Biophysics

DOI

10.1016/j.bbamem.2018.06.004

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3/25/2026