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LL-37

Cathelicidin, hCAP-18, FALL-39, CAP-18

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2023 pubmed 12 citations

The Mechanism of Action of SAAP-148 Antimicrobial Peptide as Studied with NMR and Molecular Dynamics Simulations.

Adélaïde. Morgane M; Salnikov. Evgeniy E; Ramos-Martín. Francisco F; Aisenbrey. Christopher C; Sarazin. Catherine C; Bechinger. Burkhard B; D'Amelio. Nicola N

Key Findings

  • SAAP-148 adopts a helical shape that becomes stable when it contacts bacterial‑like membranes
  • It binds bacterial membranes through salt bridges with lipid phosphates, but shows little interaction with mammalian membrane models
  • The peptide likely kills bacteria by a carpet‑like disruption rather than forming defined pores

Practical Outcomes

  • The study hints that SAAP-148 may be an effective, low‑toxicity antimicrobial for future use, especially against resistant infections or biofilms. However, it doesn’t provide dosing or administration guidance, so biohackers should view it as promising basic science awaiting clinical development.

Summary

SAAP-148, a peptide based on the natural LL‑37, sticks to bacterial membranes and flattens out like a carpet, breaking them apart without making holes, while it barely interacts with human cell membranes, suggesting it could be a safe way to kill tough, drug‑resistant bugs.

Abstract

SAAP-148 is an antimicrobial peptide derived from LL-37. It exhibits excellent activity against drug-resistant bacteria and biofilms while resisting degradation in physiological conditions. Despite its optimal pharmacological properties, its mechanism of action at the molecular level has not been explored. The structural properties of SAAP-148 and its interaction with phospholipid membranes mimicking mammalian and bacterial cells were studied using liquid and solid-state NMR spectroscopy as well as molecular dynamics simulations. SAAP-148 is partially structured in solution and stabilizes its helical conformation when interacting with DPC micelles. The orientation of the helix within the micelles was defined by paramagnetic relaxation enhancements and found similar to that obtained using solid-state NMR, where the tilt and pitch angles were determined based on <sup>15</sup>N chemical shift in oriented models of bacterial membranes (POPE/POPG). Molecular dynamic simulations revealed that SAAP-148 approaches the bacterial membrane by forming salt bridges between lysine and arginine residues and lipid phosphate groups while interacting minimally with mammalian models containing POPC and cholesterol. SAAP-148 stabilizes its helical fold onto bacterial-like membranes, placing its helix axis almost perpendicular to the surface normal, thus probably acting by a carpet-like mechanism on the bacterial membrane rather than forming well-defined pores.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2023

Date

2023-02-24T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3390/pharmaceutics15030761

Citations

12

References

116