Design and characterization of a new hybrid peptide from LL-37 and BMAP-27.
Al Tall. Yara Y; Abualhaijaa. Ahmad A; Alsaggar. Mohammad M; Almaaytah. Ammar A; Masadeh. Majed M; Alzoubi. Karem H KH
Key Findings
- B1 kills Gram‑positive and Gram‑negative bacteria at 10‑20 µM and can disrupt biofilms at 40‑60 µM.
- The peptide shows low toxicity to human kidney cells and causes minimal red‑blood‑cell damage.
- When combined with standard antibiotics, B1 dramatically lowers the amount of antibiotic needed, sometimes to 0.5 µM.
Practical Outcomes
- While B1 isn’t available as a supplement or drug yet, the study suggests that hybrid antimicrobial peptides could become safer, more effective tools against resistant infections. For biohackers, this points to future possibilities for topical or systemic antimicrobial strategies that might work alongside existing antibiotics, but more research and regulatory approval are needed before real‑world use.
Summary
Researchers created a new antimicrobial peptide called B1 by mixing parts of two natural peptides (LL-37 and BMAP-27). B1 can kill a wide range of bacteria, including drug‑resistant ones, at low micromolar concentrations, works better when paired with common antibiotics, and appears less toxic to human cells than the original peptides.
Abstract
<b>Background and purpose:</b> The world is heading to a post-antibiotic era where the treatment of bacterial infections will not be possible even with well-known last-line antibiotics. Unfortunately, the emergence of multidrug resistant bacterial strains is uncontrollable, and the humanity will face a life-threatening fate unless new antimicrobial agents with new bacterial target sites are promptly developed. Herein, we design a hybrid antimicrobial peptide (B1) from helical parts taken from the parent peptides: LL-37 and BMAP-27. The purpose of this design is to improve the potency and enhance the toxicity profile of the parent peptides. <b>Methods:</b> Rational design was used to hybridize two antimicrobial peptides, in which two helical parts from the bovine analog BMAP-27, and the human cathelicidin LL-37 were used to generate a novel peptide (B1). The physicochemical properties were checked using in silico methods. The antimicrobial activities were tested against nine control and resistant strains of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. On the other hand, the antibiofilm activities were tested against four resistant strains. The cytotoxicity on mammalian cells was tested using HEK293, and the hemolysis activity was also investigated on human blood. Finally, synergistic studies were performed with four conventional antibiotics against four resistant strains of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. <b>Results:</b> The new peptide B1 exhibited broad-spectrum activities against all tested strains. The concentration against planktonic cells ranged between 10 and 20 µM. However, 40-60 µM were needed to eradicate the biofilms. B1 showed reduced toxicity toward mammalian cells with minimal hemolysis risk. On the other hand, the synergistic studies showed improved activities for the combined conventional antibiotics with a huge reduction in their minimum inhibitory concentration values. The concentrations of B1 peptide combined with the tested antibiotics were also decreased markedly down to 0.5 µM in some cases. <b>Conclusion:</b> B1 is a hybrid peptide from two cathelicidin peptides. It showed an improved activity compared to parent peptides. The hybridization was successful in this study. It generated a new potent broad-spectrum antimicrobial. The toxicity profile was improved, and the synergism with the convention antibiotics showed promising results.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-04-30T00:00:00.000Z
10.2147/idr.s199473