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LL-37

Cathelicidin, hCAP-18, FALL-39, CAP-18

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 1
2017 pubmed 55 citations

High Specific Selectivity and Membrane-Active Mechanism of Synthetic Cationic Hybrid Antimicrobial Peptides Based on the Peptide FV7.

Tan. Tingting T; Wu. Di D; Li. Weizhong W; Zheng. Xin X; Li. Weifen W; Shan. Anshan A

Key Findings

  • The hybrid peptide FV‑LL showed strong antibacterial activity against both Gram‑negative and Gram‑positive bacteria.
  • FV‑LL caused low hemolysis, meaning it is less likely to damage human red blood cells.
  • It disrupts bacterial membranes and prevents biofilm formation, as shown by fluorescence assays and electron microscopy.

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers, this research is not yet actionable because it is an early‑stage lab study with no human dosing or safety data. It does highlight a promising strategy for designing new antimicrobial agents, but further development is needed before any real‑world protocols can be recommended.

Summary

Scientists made new hybrid antimicrobial peptides by mixing a base peptide (FV7) with short pieces from natural peptides. One of these hybrids, called FV‑LL, kills a wide range of bacteria, breaks their membranes, and causes less damage to human red blood cells than some other peptides. It also stops bacteria from forming biofilms, which are protective layers that make infections harder to treat.

Abstract

Hybrid peptides integrating different functional domains of peptides have many advantages, such as remarkable antimicrobial activity, lower hemolysis and ideal cell selectivity, compared with natural antimicrobial peptides. FV7 (FRIRVRV-NH₂), a consensus amphiphilic sequence was identified as being analogous to host defense peptides. In this study, we designed a series of hybrid peptides FV7-LL-37 (17-29) (FV-LL), FV7-magainin 2 (9-21) (FV-MA) and FV7-cecropin A (1-8) (FV-CE) by combining the FV7 sequence with the small functional sequences LL-37 (17-29) (LL), magainin 2 (9-21) (MA) and cecropin A (1-8) (CE) which all come from well-described natural peptides. The results demonstrated that the synthetic hybrid peptides, in particular FV-LL, had potent antibacterial activities over a wide range of Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria with lower hemolytic activity than other peptides. Furthermore, fluorescent spectroscopy indicated that the hybrid peptide FV-LL exhibited marked membrane destruction by inducing outer and inner bacterial membrane permeabilization, while scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) demonstrated that FV-LL damaged membrane integrity by disrupting the bacterial membrane. Inhibiting biofilm formation assays also showed that FV-LL had similar anti-biofilm activity compared with the functional peptide sequence FV7. Synthetic cationic hybrid peptides based on FV7 could provide new models for combining different functional domains and demonstrate effective avenues to screen for novel antimicrobial agents.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2017

Date

2017-02-06T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3390/ijms18020339

Citations

55

References

52