Arginine-lysine positional swap of the LL-37 peptides reveals evolutional advantages of the native sequence and leads to bacterial probes.
Wang. Xiuqing X; Junior. José Carlos Bozelli JCB; Mishra. Biswajit B; Lushnikova. Tamara T; Epand. Richard M RM; Wang. Guangshun G
Key Findings
- K‑R swaps have little effect on minimal inhibitory concentrations but alter killing speed
- The native LL‑37 peptide kills bacteria faster and is less harmful to human cells than swapped variants
- Swapped peptides display distinct membrane‑permeation signatures that could serve as bacterial probes
Practical Outcomes
- If you’re using LL‑37‑based peptides for antimicrobial purposes, stick with the natural sequence for better efficacy and safety. The swapped versions might be explored as diagnostic tools to differentiate bacterial types, but they’re not superior for treatment. Future peptide design should favor arginine placement similar to the native LL‑37.
Summary
Switching the positions of lysine and arginine in LL-37‑derived antimicrobial peptides doesn’t change how much of the peptide is needed to stop bacterial growth, but it does change how quickly they kill bacteria and how safe they are for human cells. The original LL-37 sequence works faster, kills more efficiently, and is less toxic than the swapped versions, and the swapped peptides show unique patterns that could help identify different bacteria.
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides are essential components of the innate immune system of multicellular organisms. Although cationic and hydrophobic amino acids are known determinants of these amphipathic molecules for bacterial killing, it is not clear how lysine-arginine (K-R) positional swaps influence peptide structure and activity. This study addresses this question by investigating two groups of peptides (GF-17 and 17BIPHE2) derived from human cathelicidin LL-37. K-R positional swap showed little effect on minimal inhibitory concentrations of the peptides. However, there are clear differences in bacterial killing kinetics. The membrane permeation patterns vary with peptide and bacterial types, but not changes in fluorescent dyes, salts or pH. In general, the original peptide is more efficient in bacterial killing, but less toxic to human cells, than the K-R swapped peptides, revealing the evolutionary significance of the native sequence for host defense. The characteristic membrane permeation patterns for different bacteria suggest a possible application of these K-R positional-swapped peptides as molecular probes for the type of bacteria. Such differences are related to bacterial membrane compositions: minimal for Gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus with essentially all anionic lipids (cardiolipin and phosphatidylglycerol), but evident for Gram-negative Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Escherichia coli with a mixture of phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylglycerol. Biophysical characterization found similar structures and binding affinities for these peptides in vesicle systems mimicking E. coli and S. aureus. It seems that interfacial arginines of GF-17 are preferred over lysines in bacterial membrane permeation. Our study sheds new light on the design of cationic amphipathic peptides.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
2017-04-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.bbamem.2017.04.018
26
34