Samples for colony determination
were taken at 0, 1, 2, 4, 6 and 8 hours after addition and transferred to a ten-fold dilution row. Colony counts were determined after incubation for 24 hours at 37°C. ATP leakage assay Pore formation as caused by peptide addition was determined by measuring ATP leakage from the bacterial cell using a bioluminescence assay [31]. The assay was used to estimate differences between sub-typical chimeras 1, 2 and 3 on S. aureus and S. marcescens and to evaluate the effect of chain length of mixed type chimeras 4a, 4b and 4c on S. aureus. In brief, bacteria were grown in TSB at 37°C for 24 hours and then re-inoculated in TSB at 37°C for 6-8 hours until an absorbance at 546 nm of 2.5 for Selleckchem GM6001 S. aureus and 2.0 for S. marcescens Ferrostatin-1 in vivo and then harvested (10 min at 2,000 × g). The bacteria were grown to a high absorbance since a high concentration of bacteria was necessary in order
to get a measurable response in the ATP leakage assay. Cells were washed once in 50 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) and once in 50 mM HEPES buffer (pH 7.0), before the pellet was resuspended in HEPES buffer to an OD546 ~ 10, and then stored on ice. Before chimera addition bacteria were pre-incubated with 0.2% (w/v) glucose to energize the cells. In general a chimera dose of 1000 μg/mL (corresponding to 280-552 μM for all chimeras) was used for all assays; however, for determining dose response curves additional doses of 100 (28-55 μM), 250 (71-137 μM) and 500 (140-276 μM) μg/mL were tested, and only the immediate release was noted. Total ATP and extracellular ATP were determined with a luminometer (Pharmacia Biotech Novaspec Lck II Visible Spectrophotometer). Intracellular volumes [32] of S. aureus and S. marcescens (0.85 μm3 and 1.7 μm3, respectively) were subtracted from the total volume before calculating the extracellular ATP concentration; the intracellular ATP concentration could then be calculated from this and the total ATP. ATP leakage kinetics was determined on a bacterial suspension
prepared as above. Samples were taken at time 0, 5, 10, 20, 30 and 60 minutes and viable counts determined. Both the ATP leakage assay and killing kinetics performed under the same assay conditions were performed in two independent experiments. Results Based on our previously published work on α-peptide/β-peptoid chimeras [23, 24, 29] we selected six compounds for the present study. Our main purpose was to examine the influence of the type of cationic amino acid and chain length on antibacterial activity and specificity. Also we aimed at elucidating the mechanism of action against live bacterial cells and www.selleckchem.com/products/mi-503.html determine if this (membrane perturbation) was influenced by the chimera structural characteristics. We measured ATP leakage from chimera-treated cells as an indication of membrane pertubation.