posted on 2016-07-13, 07:09authored byRico Schmidt, Andor Krizsan, Daniela Volke, Daniel Knappe, Ralf Hoffmann
Bacteria have acquired resistance mechanisms
to overcome antibiotic treatments, triggering major concerns about
the return of epidemic infections. Antimicrobial peptides identified
in insects, animals, and plants represent a huge pool of promising
lead structures that can be further developed for medical applications.
Short proline-rich antimicrobial peptides (PrAMPs) have gained much
attention due to their clinically interesting activity spectrum, serum
protease stability, efficacy in murine infection models, and low adverse
effects. Here we induced resistances by incubating Escherichia
coli with increasing concentrations of apidaecin 1b, a PrAMP
isolated from honeybees, and quantitatively evaluated the proteomes
between wild-type and resistant strains. Surprisingly, 2D differential
gel electrophoresis did not reveal differences, indicating that the
expression levels of dominant proteins were very similar. Reversed-phase
chromatography coupled online to a mass spectrometer identified 2131
proteins in the soluble fraction (cytosolic fraction) and 1296 proteins
in the nonsolubilized pellet (membrane fraction). Overall 29 proteins
showed a statistically significant upregulation in the resistant E. coli strain, whereas 18 proteins were downregulated.
Interestingly, periplasmic chaperone FimC, fimbrial protein FimA,
and mannose-binding domain protein FimH, which are part of the fimbrial
complex, were not detected in the resistant strain that was also unable
to form biofilms. Furthermore, the expression of a few other proteins
known as virulence factors was downregulated. Additionally, the expression
level of isochorismatase hydrolase (YcaC) decreased in the membrane
fraction of the resistant strain to 35%, and the corresponding knockout
mutant of E. coli BW25113 was eight times less susceptible
to apidaecin 1b and the related designer peptide Api88.