Dictionary Definition
gramicidin n : an antibiotic produced by a soil
bacterium; used chiefly as an antiseptic in treating local
infections produced by Gram-positive bacteria
Extensive Definition
Gramicidin is a heterogeneous mixture of six
antibiotic compounds, Gramicidins A, B and C, making up 80%, 6%,
and 14% respectively, all of which are obtained from the soil
bacterial species Bacillus
brevis and called collectively Gramicidin D. Gramicidin D are
linear pentadecapeptides; that is chains made up of 15 amino acids.
This is in contrast to Gramicidin S
which is a cyclic peptide chain. Gramicidin is active against
Gram-positive
bacteria, except for the Gram-positive bacilli, and against select
Gram-negative
organisms, such as Neisseria
bacteria. Its therapeutic use is limited to topical application as
it induces hemolysis
in lower concentrations than bacteria cell death thus cannot be
administered internally. The exterior epidermis is composed of dead
cells, thus applying it to the surface of the skin will not cause
harm. It is used primarily as a topical antibiotic and is one of
the three constituents of consumer antibiotic Neosporin
Ophthalmic Solution. In 1939 the French-American microbiologist
René
Dubos isolated the substance tyrothricin and later showed that
it was composed of two substances, gramicidin (20%) and tyrocidine (80%). These were
the first antibiotics to be manufactured commercially.
Composition and Structure
Gramicidin is composed of the general formula: formyl-L-X-Gly-L-Ala-D-Leu-L-Ala-D-Val-L-Val-D-Val-L-Trp-D-Leu-L-Y-D-Leu-L-Trp-D-Leu-L-Trp-ethanolamineX and Y depend upon the gramicidin molecule.
There exists valine and
isoleucine variants
of all three gramicidin species and 'X' can be either. Y determines
which is which; in the place of Y Gramicidin A contains Tryptophan, B
contains Phenylalanine
and C contains Tyrosine. Also
note the alternating stereochemical
configurations (in the form of D and L) of the amino acids: this is
vital to the formation of the β-helix.
The chain assembles inside of the hydrophobic
interior of the cellular lipid
bilayer to form a β-helix. The helix itself is not long enough
to span the membrane but it dimerizes to form the
elongated channel needed to span the whole membrane.
The structure of gramicidin head-to-head dimer in
micelles and lipid bilayers was determined by solution and solid
state NMR. In organic solvents and crystals, this peptide forms
different types of non-native double helices.
Pharmacological Effect
Gramicidin's bactericidal activity is a result of increasing the permeability of the bacterial cell wall allowing inorganic monovalent cations (e.g. H+) to travel through unrestricted, thereby destroying the ion gradient between the cytoplasm and the extracellular environment.That gramicidin D functions as a channel was
demonstrated by Hladky and Haydon, who investigated the unit
conductance channel. In general, gramicidin channels are ideally
selective for monovalent cations and the single-channel
conductances for the alkali cations are ranked in the same order as
the aqueous mobilities of these ions. Divalent cations like Ca-2+
block the channel by binding near the mouth of the channel. So it
is basically impermeable to divalent cations. It also excludes
anions. Cl- in particular is excluded from the channel because its
hydration
shell is thermodynamically stronger than that of most
monovalent cations. The channel is permeable to most monovalent
cations, which move through the channel in single file. The channel
is filled with about six water molecules, almost all of which must
be displaced when an ion is transported. Thus, ions moving through
the gramicidin pore carry along a single file of water molecules.
Such a flux of ion and water molecules is known as flux
coupling. In the presence of a second type of permeable ion,
the two ions couple their flux as well. Like Valinomycin and
Nonactin,
the gramicidin channel is selective for potassium over sodium but
only slightly so. It has a permeability ration of 2.9. It is
impermeable to anions but there are conditions under which some
anion permeation may be observed. Its ability to bind and transport
cations is due to the presence of cation-binding sites in the
channel. Specifically, there are two such binding sites, one strong
and the other weak.
References
External links
- - Gramicidin A channel
gramicidin in German: Gramicidin
gramicidin in Italian: Gramicidina
gramicidin in Japanese: グラミシジン
gramicidin in Polish: Gramicydyna
gramicidin in Turkish:
Gramisidin