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Unveiling the mechanism of bactericidal activity of a cecropin A-fused endolysin LNT113oa mark
  • Cho, Jeongik ;
  • Hong, Hye Won ;
  • Park, Kyungah ;
  • Myung, Heejoon ;
  • Yoon, Hyunjin
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Publication Year
2024-03-01
Publisher
Elsevier B.V.
Citation
International Journal of Biological Macromolecules, Vol.260
Keyword
Antimicrobial peptideEndolysinGram-negative bacteriaLipopolysaccharideMembrane permeability
Mesh Keyword
Antimicrobial peptideBactericidal activityCecropin ACore oligosaccharideE. coliEndolysinGram-negative bacteriaLipopolysaccharidesMembrane permeabilityOuter membraneAnti-Bacterial AgentsAntimicrobial Cationic PeptidesEndopeptidasesEscherichia coliGram-Negative BacteriaGram-Positive BacteriaLipid AOligosaccharides
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
Structural BiologyBiochemistryMolecular Biology
Abstract
Endolysins are lytic enzymes produced by bacteriophages at the end of their lytic cycle and degrade the peptidoglycan layer of the bacterial cell wall. Thus, they have been extensively explored as a promising antibacterial agent to replace or supplement current antibiotics. Gram-negative bacteria, however, are prone to resist exogenous endolysins owing to their protective outer membrane. We previously engineered endolysin EC340, encoded by the Escherichia coli phage PBEC131, by substituting its seven amino acids and fusing an antimicrobial peptide cecropin A at its N-terminus. The engineered endolysin LNT113 exerted superior activity to its intrinsic form. This study investigated how cecropin A fusion facilitated the bactericidal activity of LNT113 toward Gram-negative bacteria. Cecropin A of LNT113 markedly increased the interaction with lipopolysaccharides, while the E. coli defective in the core oligosaccharide was less susceptible to endolysins, implicating the interaction between the core oligosaccharide and endolysins. In fact, E. coli with compromised lipid A construction was more vulnerable to LNT113 treatment, suggesting that the integrity of the lipid A layer was important to resist the internalization of LNT113 across the outer membrane. Cecropin A fusion further accelerated the inner membrane destabilization, thereby enabling LNT113 to deconstruct it promptly. Owing to the increased membrane permeability, LNT113 could inactivate some Gram-positive bacteria as well. This study demonstrates that cecropin A fusion is a feasible method to improve the membrane permeability of endolysins in both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria.
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/33906
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.129493
Fulltext

Type
Article
Funding
This work was supported by the Korea Health Industry Development Institute [KHIDI, grant number HI21C2447 ], funded by the Ministry of Health & Welfare , as well as the Bio & Medical Technology Development Program from the National Research Foundation of Korea [NRF, grant number 2021M3A9I4026029 ], funded by the Ministry of Science & ICT . The funders had no role in the design of the study and the interpretation of data.
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Yoon, Hyun Jin윤현진
College of Bio-convergence Engineering
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