Structure and Activity of a Selective Antibiofilm Peptide SK-24 Derived from the NMR Structure of Human Cathelicidin LL-37.
Zhang. Yingxia Y; Lakshmaiah Narayana. Jayaram J; Wu. Qianhui Q; Dang. Xiangli X; Wang. Guangshun G
Key Findings
- SK‑24 (residues 9‑32 of LL‑37) is ~100% helical in PBS, more than the full LL‑37 peptide
- It has antimicrobial activity comparable to other known peptides and strong antibiofilm effects
- It shows the lowest hemolysis at 200 µM among tested peptides, suggesting better safety
- The N‑terminal region (likely E16) helps stabilize the helix and may be key for oligomerization
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in antimicrobial or anti‑biofilm approaches, SK‑24 appears to be a more potent and safer peptide scaffold. While not yet a consumer product, the findings suggest short, helical fragments of LL‑37 could be explored for topical or supplement use after further safety testing and formulation development.
Summary
Researchers examined a short fragment of the human immune peptide LL‑37 called SK‑24. It forms a stable helix, kills bacteria, blocks biofilm formation, and damages red blood cells less than the full‑length peptide, indicating it could be a safer, more effective antimicrobial.
Abstract
The deployment of the innate immune system in humans is essential to protect us from infection. Human cathelicidin LL-37 is a linear host defense peptide with both antimicrobial and immune modulatory properties. Despite years of studies of numerous peptides, SK-24, corresponding to the long hydrophobic domain (residues 9-32) in the anionic lipid-bound NMR structure of LL-37, has not been investigated. This study reports the structure and activity of SK-24. Interestingly, SK-24 is entirely helical (~100%) in phosphate buffer (PBS), more than LL-37 (84%), GI-20 (75%), and GF-17 (33%), while RI-10 and 17BIPHE2 are essentially randomly coiled (helix%: 7-10%). These results imply an important role for the additional N-terminal amino acids (likely E16) of SK-24 in stabilizing the helical conformation in PBS. It is proposed herein that SK-24 contains the minimal sequence for effective oligomerization of LL-37. Superior to LL-37 and RI-10, SK-24 shows an antimicrobial activity spectrum comparable to the major antimicrobial peptides GF-17 and GI-20 by targeting bacterial membranes and forming a helical conformation. Like the engineered peptide 17BIPHE2, SK-24 has a stronger antibiofilm activity than LL-37, GI-20, and GF-17. Nevertheless, SK-24 is least hemolytic at 200 µM compared with LL-37 and its other peptides investigated herein. Combined, these results enabled us to appreciate the elegance of the long amphipathic helix SK-24 nature deploys within LL-37 for human antimicrobial defense. SK-24 may be a useful template of therapeutic potential.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-11-30T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/ph14121245
16
56