Self-Assembly of Antimicrobial Peptoids Impacts Their Biological Effects on <i>ESKAPE</i> Bacterial Pathogens.
Nielsen. Josefine Eilsø JE; Alford. Morgan Ashley MA; Yung. Deborah Bow Yue DBY; Molchanova. Natalia N; Fortkort. John A JA; Lin. Jennifer S JS; Diamond. Gill G; Hancock. Robert E W REW; Jenssen. Håvard H; Pletzer. Daniel D; Lund. Reidar R; Barron. Annelise E AE
Key Findings
- Peptoid mimics of antimicrobial peptides can self‑assemble into various nanostructures (helical bundles, ellipsoidal micelles, worm‑like micelles).
- Self‑assembly generally improves antibacterial and antibiofilm activity against ESKAPE pathogens, but worm‑like micelle structures performed worse than ellipsoidal or bundled forms.
- Effective peptoid assemblies showed activity in vitro under host‑like conditions and reduced infection severity in mouse abscess models.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the study suggests that not all antimicrobial peptide‑like compounds are equally useful; the shape they form in solution influences their ability to kill tough bacteria. While promising, these peptoids are still early‑stage research and not ready for personal use or dosage recommendations. Keep an eye on future developments that might translate these findings into safe, oral or topical antimicrobial supplements.
Summary
Scientists made eight synthetic molecules that act like natural antimicrobial peptides and can stick together in different shapes. Some of these shapes killed drug‑resistant bacteria and reduced infections in lab tests and in mice, while others were less effective. The way the molecules group together matters for how well they work, but the link isn’t perfect.
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are promising pharmaceutical candidates for the prevention and treatment of infections caused by multidrug-resistant <i>ESKAPE</i> pathogens, which are responsible for the majority of hospital-acquired infections. Clinical translation of AMPs has been limited, in part by apparent toxicity on systemic dosing and by instability arising from susceptibility to proteolysis. Peptoids (sequence-specific oligo-<i>N</i>-substituted glycines) resist proteolytic digestion and thus are of value as AMP mimics. Only a few natural AMPs such as LL-37 and polymyxin self-assemble in solution; whether antimicrobial peptoids mimic these properties has been unknown. Here, we examine the antibacterial efficacy and dynamic self-assembly in aqueous media of eight peptoid mimics of cationic AMPs designed to self-assemble and two nonassembling controls. These amphipathic peptoids self-assembled in different ways, as determined by small-angle X-ray scattering; some adopt helical bundles, while others form core-shell ellipsoidal or worm-like micelles. Interestingly, many of these peptoid assemblies show promising antibacterial, antibiofilm activity in vitro in media, under host-mimicking conditions and antiabscess activity in vivo. While self-assembly correlated overall with antibacterial efficacy, this correlation was imperfect. Certain self-assembled morphologies seem better-suited for antibacterial activity. In particular, a peptoid exhibiting a high fraction of long, worm-like micelles showed reduced antibacterial, antibiofilm, and antiabscess activity against <i>ESKAPE</i> pathogens compared with peptoids that form ellipsoidal or bundled assemblies. This is the first report of self-assembling peptoid antibacterials with activity against in vivo biofilm-like infections relevant to clinical medicine.
Study Information
pubmed
2022
2022-02-17T00:00:00.000Z
10.1021/acsinfecdis.1c00536
61
68