6 research outputs found
Adsorption of Synthetic Cationic Polymers on Model Phospholipid Membranes: Insight from Atomic-Scale Molecular Dynamics Simulations
Although synthetic cationic polymers
represent a promising class
of effective antibacterial agents, the molecular mechanisms behind
their antimicrobial activity remain poorly understood. To this end,
we employ atomic-scale molecular dynamics simulations to explore adsorption
of several linear cationic polymers of different chemical structure
and protonation (polyallylamine (PAA), polyethylenimine (PEI), polyvinylamine
(PVA), and poly-l-lysine (PLL)) on model bacterial membranes
(4:1 mixture of zwitterionic phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and anionic
phosphatidylglycerol (PG) lipids). Overall, our findings show that
binding of polycations to the anionic membrane surface effectively
neutralizes its charge, leading to the reorientation of water molecules
close to the lipid/water interface and to the partial release of counterions
to the water phase. In certain cases, one has even an overcharging
of the membrane, which was shown to be a cooperative effect of polymer
charges and lipid counterions. Protonated amine groups of polycations
are found to interact preferably with head groups of anionic lipids,
giving rise to formation of hydrogen bonds and to a noticeable lateral
immobilization of the lipids. While all the above findings are mostly
defined by the overall charge of a polymer, we found that the polymer
architecture also matters. In particular, PVA and PEI are able to
accumulate anionic PG lipids on the membrane surface, leading to lipid
segregation. In turn, PLL whose charge twice exceeds charges of PVA/PEI
does not induce such lipid segregation due to its considerably less
compact architecture and relatively long side chains. We also show
that partitioning of a polycation into the lipid/water interface is
an interplay between its protonation level (the overall charge) and
hydrophobicity of the backbone. Therefore, a possible strategy in
creating highly efficient antimicrobial polymeric agents could be
in tuning these polycationâs properties through proper combination
of protonated and hydrophobic blocks