Efficacy of the designer antimicrobial peptide SHAP1 in wound healing and wound infection.
Kim. Da Jung DJ; Lee. Young Woong YW; Park. Myung Keun MK; Shin. Ju Ri JR; Lim. Ki Jung KJ; Cho. Ju Hyun JH; Kim. Sun Chang SC
Key Findings
- SHAP1 is non‑toxic to human red blood cells and skin cells up to 200 µM
- It resists breakdown by wound‑fluid proteases for at least 12 hours
- SHAP1 speeds up skin cell migration and wound closure via EGFR activation, outperforming LL‑37 in vitro and in mouse wound models, and it reduces Staphylococcus aureus infection
Practical Outcomes
- SHAP1 shows promise as a topical agent for faster, infection‑resistant wound healing, but it’s still experimental. Enthusiasts could watch for future formulations or consider low‑dose, sterile, lab‑synthesized applications only after thorough safety validation.
Summary
The designer peptide SHAP1 helps wounds heal faster and fights Staph infections without harming human skin cells, working better than the natural peptide LL‑37 in lab tests and mouse studies. It stays stable in wound fluids and isn’t toxic up to fairly high concentrations, suggesting it could become a useful topical treatment, though it isn’t yet a commercial product.
Abstract
Infected wounds cause delay in wound closure and impose significantly negative effects on patient care and recovery. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) with antimicrobial and wound closure activities, along with little opportunity for the development of resistance, represent one of the promising agents for new therapeutic approaches in the infected wound treatment. However, therapeutic applications of these AMPs are limited by their toxicity and low stability in vivo. Previously, we reported that the 19-amino-acid designer peptide SHAP1 possessed salt-resistant antimicrobial activities. Here, we analyzed the wound closure activities of SHAP1 both in vitro and in vivo. SHAP1 did not affect the viability of human erythrocytes and keratinocytes up to 200 μM, and was not digested by exposure to proteases in the wound fluid, such as human neutrophil elastase and Staphylococcus aureus V8 proteinase for up to 12 h. SHAP1 elicited stronger wound closure activity than human cathelicidin AMP LL-37 in vitro by inducing HaCaT cell migration, which was shown to progress via transactivation of the epidermal growth factor receptor. In vivo analysis revealed that SHAP1 treatment accelerated closure and healing of full-thickness excisional wounds in mice. Moreover, SHAP1 effectively countered S. aureus infection and enhanced wound healing in S. aureus-infected murine wounds. Overall, these results suggest that SHAP1 might be developed as a novel topical agent for the infected wound treatment.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-06-22T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s00726-014-1780-5
41
48