Designing Analogs of SAAP-148 with Enhanced Antimicrobial and Anti-LPS Activities.
Gan. Lingmin L; Chi. Yulang Y; Peng. Yunhui Y; Li. Subo S; Gao. Hongwei H; Zhang. Xue X; Ji. Shouping S; Feng. Zili Z; Zhang. Shikun S
Key Findings
- Replacing lysine residues increased overall charge and lowered hydrophobicity of SAAP‑148
- Hemolysis (red‑blood‑cell damage) and toxicity to lung cells dropped with most lysine swaps, except a few analogs showed slightly higher hemolysis
- The exact position of positive charges strongly influenced antimicrobial strength and anti‑LPS activity
Practical Outcomes
- For now, the findings are mainly of scientific interest and don’t translate into a ready‑to‑use supplement or protocol. They do suggest that future peptide‑based antimicrobials could be engineered to be safer for human cells, which may eventually benefit DIY health experiments focused on infection control.
Summary
Scientists tweaked a natural immune peptide called LL‑37 (specifically its derivative SAAP‑148) by swapping lysine residues. These changes made the peptide less likely to damage human cells while still killing bacteria and neutralizing harmful bacterial toxins, but the effects depended a lot on where the swaps were made.
Abstract
SAAP-148, a derivative of LL-37, exhibits a well-defined amphipathic structure and enhanced antimicrobial activity; however, it also displays significant cytotoxicity towards human cells. In this study, we employed Lys-scan to produce a series of amphiphilic SAAP-148 analogs derived from the SAAP-148 sequence to investigate the impact of the distribution of positively charged residues on the biological viability of the antimicrobial peptides (AMPs). The physical properties and biological activity of the designed peptides were subsequently compared. The substitution of lysine resulted in an increase in the overall charge of SAAP-148 and a decrease in its overall hydrophobicity and hyd. moment, except for SAAP-10 where an analogue substitution occurred at the 18th residue. The replacement of lysine led to a reduction in hemolytic activity compared to SAAP-148, with slightly higher haemolysis rates observed in SAAP-11 and SAAP-13. The cytotoxicity of peptides towards human normal lung epithelial cells (BEAS-2B) was closely linked to their haemolytic activity, indicating that substituting lysine may mitigate the cytotoxic effects of SAAP-148. Additionally, the arrangement of positively charged residues in the peptides significantly influenced its antimicrobial activity. Our findings suggest that the positioning of a positively charged residue has a significant impact on the biophysical properties of the peptide. Additionally, the substitution of lysine at different positions demonstrates an influence on the anti-lipopolysaccharide (anti-LPS) activity of SAAP-148. These discoveries provide valuable insights for the design and optimization of antimicrobial peptides, which will be advantageous for the future development of antimicrobial agents.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-11-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/ijms252111776
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