Short and Robust Anti-Infective Lipopeptides Engineered Based on the Minimal Antimicrobial Peptide KR12 of Human LL-37.
Lakshmaiah Narayana. Jayaram J; Golla. Radha R; Mishra. Biswajit B; Wang. Xiuqing X; Lushnikova. Tamara T; Zhang. Yingxia Y; Verma. Atul A; Kumar. Vikas V; Xie. Jingwei J; Wang. Guangshun G
Key Findings
- Short, fatty‑linked version of LL‑37 (C10‑KR8d) shows strong antibacterial activity against Gram‑positive and Gram‑negative bugs
- The d‑amino‑acid form is more stable in serum and less likely to bind other proteins
- In mice, C10‑KR8d reduces MRSA infection and prevents catheter‑related biofilms without quickly causing resistance
Practical Outcomes
- The peptide is promising for future anti‑infection drugs, but it isn’t ready for self‑administration. Biohackers should view it as a research lead rather than a usable supplement, and wait for safety and dosing data from human trials.
Summary
Scientists trimmed the human immune peptide LL‑37 down to a tiny version and added a fatty tail, creating a short molecule called C10‑KR8d that kills a wide range of bacteria, stops biofilm formation, and even helps the immune system in mouse tests, but it’s still far from being a safe, approved supplement for people.
Abstract
This study aims to push the frontier of the engineering of human cathelicidin LL-37, a critical antimicrobial innate immune peptide that wards off invading pathogens. By sequential truncation of the smallest antibacterial peptide (KR12) of LL-37 and conjugation with fatty acids, with varying chain lengths, a library of lipopeptides is generated. These peptides are subjected to antibacterial activity and hemolytic assays. Candidates (including both forms made of l- and d-amino acids) with the optimal cell selectivity are subsequently fed to the second layer of <i>in vitro</i> filters, including salts, pH, serum, and media. These practices lead to the identification of a miniature LL-37 like peptide (d-form) with selectivity, stability, and robust antimicrobial activity <i>in vitro</i> against both Gram-positive and negative bacteria. Proteomic studies reveal far fewer serum proteins that bind to the d-form than the l-form peptide. C10-KR8d targets bacterial membranes to become helical, making it difficult for bacteria to develop resistance in a multiple passage experiment. <i>In vivo</i>, C10-KR8d is able to reduce bacterial burden of methicillin-resistant <i>Staphylococcus aureus</i> (MRSA) USA300 LAC in neutropenic mice. In addition, this designer peptide prevents bacterial biofilm formation in a catheter-associated mouse model. Meanwhile, C10-KR8d also recruits cytokines to the vicinity of catheters to clear infection. Thus, based on the antimicrobial region of LL-37, this study succeeds in identifying the smallest anti-infective peptide C10-KR8d with both robust antimicrobial, antibiofilm, and immune modulation activities.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-04-23T00:00:00.000Z
10.1021/acsinfecdis.1c00101
35
46