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Modification of Salmonella Lipopolysaccharides Prevents the Outer Membrane Penetration of Novobiocin

  • Thatyane M. Nobre
  • , Michael W. Martynowycz
  • , Konstantin Andreev
  • , Ivan Kuzmenko
  • , Hiroshi Nikaido
  • , David Gidalevitz
  • University of California at Berkeley
  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Illinois Institute of Technology
  • United States Department of Energy

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

33 Scopus citations

Abstract

Small hydrophilic antibiotics traverse the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria through porin channels. Large lipophilic agents traverse the outer membrane through its bilayer, containing a majority of lipopolysaccharides in its outer leaflet. Genes controlled by the two-component regulatory system PhoPQ modify lipopolysaccharides. We isolate lipopolysaccharides from isogenic mutants of Salmonella sp., one lacking the modification, the other fully modified. These lipopolysaccharides were reconstituted as monolayers at the air-water interface, and their properties, as well as their interaction with a large lipophilic drug, novobiocin, was studied. X-ray reflectivity showed that the drug penetrated the monolayer of the unmodified lipopolysaccharides reaching the hydrophobic region, but was prevented from this penetration into the modified lipopolysaccharides. Results correlate with behavior of bacterial cells, which become resistant to antibiotics after PhoPQ-regulated modifications. Grazing incidence x-ray diffraction showed that novobiocin produced a striking increase in crystalline coherence length, and the size of the near-crystalline domains.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2537-2545
Number of pages9
JournalBiophysical Journal
Volume109
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 15 2015

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