Monitoring Antimicrobial Mechanisms of Surface Immobilized Peptides in Situ.

LANGMUIR(2018)

Cited 29|Views3
No score
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) in free solution can kill bacteria by disrupting bacterial cell membranes. Their modes of action have been extensively studied, and various models ranging from pore formation to carpet-like mechanisms were proposed. Surface-immobilized AMPs have been used as coatings to kill bacteria and as sensors to capture bacteria, but the interaction mechanisms of surface-immobilized AMPS and bacteria are not fully understood. In this research, an analytical platform, sum frequency generation (SFG) microscope, which is composed of an SFG vibrational spectrometer and a fluorescence microscope, was used to probe molecular interactions between surface-immobilized AMPs and bacteria in situ in real time at the solid/liquid interface. SFG probed the molecular structure of surface-immobilized AMPs while interacting with bacteria, and fluorescence images of dead bacteria were monitored as a function of time during the peptide bacteria interaction. It was believed that upon bacteria contact, the surface-immobilized peptides changed their orientation and killed bacteria. This research demonstrated that the SFG microscope platform can examine the structure and function (bacterial killing) at the same time in the same sample environment, providing in-depth understanding on the structure activity relationships of surface immobilized AMPs.
More
Translated text
Key words
peptides,antimicrobial mechanisms,surface-immobilized
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined