AbstractRepresenting a physiological “Achilles' heel”, the cell wall precursor lipid II (LII) is a prime target for various classes of antibiotics. Over the years LII-binding agents have been recognized as promising candidates and templates in the search for new antibacterial compounds to complement or replace existing drugs. To elucidate the molecular structural basis underlying LII functional mechanism and to better understand if and how lantibiotic binding alters the molecular behavior of LII, we performed molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of phospholipid membrane-embedded LII in the absence and presence of the LII-binding lantibiotic nisin. In a series of 2×4 independent, unbiased 100ns MD simulations we sampled the conformational dyn...
Nisin is a cationic polycyclic bacteriocin secreted by some lactic acid bacteria. Nisin has previous...
In response to the growing threat posed by antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains, extensive researc...
Nisin and related lantibiotics kill bacteria by pore formation, or by sequestering Lipid II. Some la...
AbstractRepresenting a physiological “Achilles' heel”, the cell wall precursor lipid II (LII) is a p...
Lanthionine antibiotics are an important class of naturally-occurring antimicrobial peptides. The be...
AbstractThe antimicrobial peptide nisin exerts its activity by a unique dual mechanism. It permeates...
Lanthionine-containing peptides (lantibiotics) have been considered as pharmaceutical candidates for...
The emerging antibiotics-resistance problem has underlined the urgent need for novel antimicrobial a...
The alarming rise of antimicrobial resistance requires antibiotics with unexploited mechanisms.Ideal...
peer reviewedNisin is a 34-residue lantibiotic widely used as food preservative. Its mode of ...
AbstractNisin is a 34-residue lantibiotic widely used as food preservative. Its mode of action on th...
Nisin is an example of type-A lantibiotics that contain cyclic lanthionine rings and unusual dehydra...
Unlike numerous pore-forming amphiphilic peptide antibiotics, the lantibiotic nisin is active in nan...
The alarming rise of antimicrobial resistance requires antibiotics with unexploited mechanisms. Idea...
Nisin is the preeminent lantibiotic, and to date its antibacterial mechanism has been investigated u...
Nisin is a cationic polycyclic bacteriocin secreted by some lactic acid bacteria. Nisin has previous...
In response to the growing threat posed by antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains, extensive researc...
Nisin and related lantibiotics kill bacteria by pore formation, or by sequestering Lipid II. Some la...
AbstractRepresenting a physiological “Achilles' heel”, the cell wall precursor lipid II (LII) is a p...
Lanthionine antibiotics are an important class of naturally-occurring antimicrobial peptides. The be...
AbstractThe antimicrobial peptide nisin exerts its activity by a unique dual mechanism. It permeates...
Lanthionine-containing peptides (lantibiotics) have been considered as pharmaceutical candidates for...
The emerging antibiotics-resistance problem has underlined the urgent need for novel antimicrobial a...
The alarming rise of antimicrobial resistance requires antibiotics with unexploited mechanisms.Ideal...
peer reviewedNisin is a 34-residue lantibiotic widely used as food preservative. Its mode of ...
AbstractNisin is a 34-residue lantibiotic widely used as food preservative. Its mode of action on th...
Nisin is an example of type-A lantibiotics that contain cyclic lanthionine rings and unusual dehydra...
Unlike numerous pore-forming amphiphilic peptide antibiotics, the lantibiotic nisin is active in nan...
The alarming rise of antimicrobial resistance requires antibiotics with unexploited mechanisms. Idea...
Nisin is the preeminent lantibiotic, and to date its antibacterial mechanism has been investigated u...
Nisin is a cationic polycyclic bacteriocin secreted by some lactic acid bacteria. Nisin has previous...
In response to the growing threat posed by antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains, extensive researc...
Nisin and related lantibiotics kill bacteria by pore formation, or by sequestering Lipid II. Some la...