Browsing by Author "Nguyen, Thao N."
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Item Cooperativity in Bacterial Membrane Association Controls the Synergistic Activities of Antimicrobial Peptides(American Chemical Society, 2022) Nguyen, Thao N.; Teimouri, Hamid; Medvedeva, Angela; Kolomeisky, Anatoly B.; Center for Theoretical Biological PhysicsAntimicrobial peptides (AMPs), or defence peptides, are compounds naturally produced during immune responses of living organisms against bacterial infections that are currently actively considered as promising alternatives to antibiotics. Recent experimental studies uncovered that in many situations, combinations of different AMPs are much more successful in eliminating the bacterial pathogens than single peptide species. However, the microscopic origin of such synergistic activities remains not fully understood. We present and investigate a possible mechanism of synergy between AMPs. It is based on the idea that due to inter-molecular interactions, the presence of an AMP of one type stimulates the association of an AMP of another type, and this accelerates the overall association to the membrane, eventually killing the bacteria. This approach allows us to fully quantify the synergistic activities of AMPs, and it is successfully applied for several experimental systems. It is found that strong cooperativity can be achieved for relatively weak inter-molecular interactions, suggesting that the application of combinations of AMPs can be further rationally optimized to make it a powerful antibacterial treatment.Item Single-cell stochastic modelling of the action of antimicrobial peptides on bacteria(The Royal Society, 2021) Teimouri,Hamid; Nguyen, Thao N.; Kolomeisky, Anatoly B.; Center for Theoretical Biological PhysicsAntimicrobial peptides (AMPs) produced by multi-cellular organisms as their immune system's defence against microbes are actively considered as natural alternatives to conventional antibiotics. Although substantial progress has been achieved in studying the AMPs, the microscopic mechanisms of their functioning remain not well understood. Here, we develop a new theoretical framework to investigate how the AMPs are able to efficiently neutralize bacteria. In our minimal theoretical model, the most relevant processes, AMPs entering into and the following inhibition of the single bacterial cell, are described stochastically. Using complementary master equations approaches, all relevant features of bacteria clearance dynamics by AMPs, such as the probability of inhibition and the mean times before the clearance, are explicitly evaluated. It is found that both processes, entering and inhibition, are equally important for the efficient functioning of AMPs. Our theoretical method naturally explains a wide spectrum of efficiencies of existing AMPs and their heterogeneity at the single-cell level. Theoretical calculations are also consistent with existing single-cell measurements. Thus, the presented theoretical approach clarifies some microscopic aspects of the action of AMPs on bacteria.