AI Article Synopsis

  • Research focuses on polymyxin-resistant multidrug-resistant infections in immunocompromised patients, leading to the development of cyclic lipopeptides like FADDI-019 (F19).
  • The study investigates how F19 interacts with a model of the bacterium's asymmetric outer membrane, showing that it can displace calcium ions on the membrane surface without penetrating deeply into the bilayer initially.
  • When multiple F19 molecules are present, while one remains on the surface, the others can insert themselves into the bilayer, indicating a low energy barrier for their intercalation, which has implications for designing better treatments against polymyxin resistance.

Article Abstract

Research in the continuously increasing threat of polymyxin-resistant multidrug-resistant , which causes severe infection in immunocompromised patients, has resulted in the development of several polymyxin-derived cyclic lipopeptides containing l-α-γ- diamino butyric acid-like FADDI-019 (F19). In this work, F19's insertion into a minimal model of the asymmetric outer membrane of the bacterium, which contained only penta-acylated lipid A (LipA) and lacked keto-d-octulosonic acid and O-antigens, in the top leaflet and phospholipids in the bottom leaflet, was studied. F19 exhibited all of the hallmarks of the self-uptake mechanism into the asymmetric bilayer. While a single monomer of the lipopeptide did not get partitioned into the inside of the bilayer, it competitively displaced Ca from the membrane surface, observed as a decrease in Ca coordination number with phosphate groups (1.89 vs 1.718), resulting in membrane destabilization. This resulted in an increment of the average defect size and the probability of interplay between lipid tails and hydrophobic residues of another F19. When more than one monomer was present in the system, the first monomer remained docked on the surface, while other monomers intercalated into the bilayer interior with their hydrophobic moieties "sleeved" by lipid acyl chains. The free energy barrier for partial insertion of the lipopeptide into a bilayer in the presence of surface-docked second F19 was recorded at ∼1.3 kcal/mol using two-dimensional (2D) well-tempered metadynamics, making it a low barrier process at 300 K. This study is an attempt to demonstrate the self-uptake mechanism of F19 during intercalation process into the bilayer interior, which may help in the design of better alternates for polymyxins to work against polymyxin resistance.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.2c03827DOI Listing

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