De novo design and synthesis of ultra-short peptidomimetic antibiotics having dual antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory activities.
Murugan. Ravichandran N RN; Jacob. Binu B; Ahn. Mija M; Hwang. Eunha E; Sohn. Hoik H; Park. Hyo-Nam HN; Lee. Eunjung E; Seo. Ji-Hyung JH; Cheong. Chaejoon C; Nam. Ky-Youb KY; Hyun. Jae-Kyung JK; Jeong. Ki-Woong KW; Kim. Yangmee Y; Shin. Song Yub SY; Bang. Jeong Kyu JK
Key Findings
- Ultra‑short His‑derived peptides with alkyl tails and arginine show higher bacterial selectivity than LL‑37
- HDAMP‑1,‑3,‑5,‑6 exhibit strong antimicrobial activity, including against MRSA, plus anti‑inflammatory effects
- These peptides are protease‑resistant and kill bacteria by forming membrane pores that collapse the membrane potential
Practical Outcomes
- While not yet a consumer product, these findings suggest that very short, stable peptides could become effective, low‑toxicity antimicrobial or anti‑inflammatory supplements or topical agents in the future. For now, the work mainly informs the direction of peptide‑based health tools rather than providing an immediate protocol to try.
Summary
Scientists made very short, custom‑designed peptides (called HDAMPs) that are smaller than the natural human peptide LL‑37 but work even better at killing harmful bacteria and calming inflammation. They added hydrophobic tails and extra positive charges to make the peptides stick to bacterial membranes, kill them by punching holes, and resist being broken down by enzymes. Some of these new peptides work against tough bugs like MRSA and also reduce inflammatory signals, showing promise for future health applications.
Abstract
Much attention has been focused on the design and synthesis of potent, cationic antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) that possess both antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory activities. However, their development into therapeutic agents has been limited mainly due to their large size (12 to 50 residues in length) and poor protease stability. In an attempt to overcome the issues described above, a set of ultra-short, His-derived antimicrobial peptides (HDAMPs) has been developed for the first time. Through systematic tuning of pendant hydrophobic alkyl tails at the N(π)- and N(τ)-positions on His, and the positive charge of Arg, much higher prokaryotic selectivity was achieved, compared to human AMP LL-37. Additionally, the most potent HDAMPs showed promising dual antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory activities, as well as anti-methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) activity and proteolytic resistance. Our results from transmission electron microscopy, membrane depolarization, confocal laser-scanning microscopy, and calcein-dye leakage experiments propose that HDAMP-1 kills microbial cells via dissipation of the membrane potential by forming pore/ion channels on bacterial cell membranes. The combination of the ultra-short size, high-prokaryotic selectivity, potent anti-MRSA activity, anti-inflammatory activity, and proteolytic resistance of the designed HDAMP-1, -3, -5, and -6 makes these molecules promising candidates for future antimicrobial therapeutics.
Study Information
pubmed
2013
2013-11-26T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.pone.0080025
29
49