Spotlight on the Selected New Antimicrobial Innate Immune Peptides Discovered During 2015-2019.
Dang. Xiangli X; Wang. Guangshun G
Key Findings
- ~500 new natural antimicrobial peptides were catalogued between 2015‑2019, many with unique mechanisms against resistant microbes
- Human cathelicidin LL‑37 production is up‑regulated by vitamin D supplementation
- Various novel peptides (e.g., teixobactin, darobactin, cOB1, urumin) show potent activity at very low concentrations, highlighting new therapeutic avenues
Practical Outcomes
- Consider maintaining adequate vitamin D levels (through sunlight, diet, or supplements) to naturally increase LL‑37, potentially enhancing innate immune protection. No specific dosing or protocol is provided, so start with standard vitamin D guidelines and monitor blood levels.
Summary
Scientists have added about 500 new natural antimicrobial peptides to the database, showing many new ways to fight drug‑resistant bugs. One of the well‑known human peptides, LL‑37, can be boosted by taking vitamin D, which may help the body’s first line of defense. While the paper mostly lists discoveries, the vitamin‑D link gives a simple, actionable tip for people looking to support their immunity.
Abstract
Antibiotic resistance is a global issue and new anti-microbials are required. Anti-microbial peptides are important players of host innate immune systems that prevent infections. Due to their ability to eliminate drug-resistant pathogens, AMPs are promising candidates for developing the next generation of anti-microbials. The anti-microbial peptide database provides a useful tool for searching, predicting, and designing new AMPs. In the period from 2015-2019, ~500 new natural peptides have been registered. This article highlights a selected set of new AMP members with interesting properties. Teixobactin is a cell wall inhibiting peptide antibiotic, while darobactin inhibits a chaperone and translocator for outer membrane proteins. Remarkably, cOB1, a sex pheromone from commensal enterococci, restricts the growth of multidrug-resistant Enterococcus faecalis in the gut at a picomolar concentration. A novel proline-rich AMP has been found in the plant Brassica napus. A shrimp peptide MjPen- II comprises three different sequence domains: serine-rich, proline-rich, and cysteine-rich regions. Surprisingly, an amphibian peptide urumin specifically inhibits H1 hemagglutinin-bearing influenza A virus. Defensins are abundant and typically consist of three pairs of intramolecular disulfide bonds. However, rat rattusin dimerizes via forming five pairs of intermolecular disulfide bonds. While human LL-37 can be induced by vitamin D, vitamin A induces the expression of resistin-like molecule alpha (RELMα) in mice. The isolation and characterization of an alternative human cathelicidin peptide, TLN-58, substantiates the concept of one gene multiple peptides. The involvement of a fly AMP nemuri in sleep induction may promote the research on the relationship between sleep and infection control. The functional roles of AMPs continue to grow and the general term "innate immune peptides" becomes useful. These discoveries widen our view on the anti-microbial peptides and may open new opportunities for developing novel peptide therapeutics for different applications.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-10-22T00:00:00.000Z
10.2174/1568026620666201022143625
6
127