Segment-Based Peptide Design Reveals the Importance of N-Terminal High Cationicity for Antimicrobial Activity Against Gram-Negative Pathogens.
Mechesso. Abraham Fikru AF; Zhang. Weiwei W; Su. Yajuan Y; Xie. Jingwei J; Wang. Guangshun G
Key Findings
- High density of positive (cationic) amino acids at the Nāterminus boosts antimicrobial activity against Gramānegative pathogens.
- Short, ultrashort peptides (ā8ā10 amino acids) can retain strong antibacterial effects similar to the fullālength LLā37.
- Reversing the peptide sequence reduces activity when the Nāterminal cationic cluster is lost, confirming the importance of charge placement.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY health enthusiasts, the study suggests that designing or sourcing very short, highly positively charged peptides could be a promising route for topical antiāinfection products. However, these findings are still at the labāanimal stage, so there are no readyātoāuse dosing guidelines or safety data for human use yet.
Summary
Scientists tweaked the human peptide LLā37 and found that packing lots of positive charges at the very start of the short peptide makes it much better at killing tough Gramānegative bacteria like E.āÆcoli and P.āÆaeruginosa. The best version (called RIKā10+) was also effective in a mouse wound model, while the version with fewer frontāloaded charges was weaker.
Abstract
Host defense antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are recognized candidates to develop a new generation of peptide antibiotics. While high hydrophobicity can be deployed in peptides for eliminating Gram-positive bacteria, high cationicity is usually observed in AMPs against Gram-negative pathogen. This study investigates how the sequence distribution of basic amino acids affects peptide activity. For this purpose, we utilized human cathelicidin LL-37 as a template and designed four highly selective ultrashort peptides with similar length, net charge, and hydrophobic content. LL-10 + , RK-9 + , KR-8 + , and RIK-10 + showed similar activity against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in vitro and comparable antibiofilm efficacy in a murine wound model. However, these peptides showed clear activity differences against Gram-negative pathogens with RIK-10 + (i.e., LL-37mini2) being the strongest and LL-10 + the weakest. To understand this activity difference, we characterized peptide toxicity; the effects of salts, pH, and serum on peptide activity; and the mechanism of action and determined the membrane-bound helical structure for RIK-10 + by two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy. By writing an R program, we generated charge density plots for these peptides and uncovered the importance of the N-terminal high-density basic charges for antimicrobial potency. To validate this finding, we reversed the sequences of two peptides. Interestingly, sequence reversal weakened the activity of RIK-10 + but increased the activity of LL-10 + especially against Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Acinetobacter baumannii. Those more active peptides with high cationicity at the N-terminus are also more hydrophobic based on HPLC retention times. A database search found numerous natural sequences that arrange basic amino acids primarily at the N-terminus. Combined, this study not only obtained novel peptide leads but also discovered one useful strategy for designing novel antimicrobials to control drug-resistant Gram-negative pathogens.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-10-08T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s12602-024-10376-3
2
77