Structure and function of papiliocin with antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory activities isolated from the swallowtail butterfly, Papilio xuthus.
Kim. Jin-Kyoung JK; Lee. Eunjung E; Shin. Soyoung S; Jeong. Ki-Woong KW; Lee. Jee-Young JY; Bae. Su-Young SY; Kim. Soo-Hyun SH; Lee. Juneyoung J; Kim. Seong Ryul SR; Lee. Dong Gun DG; Hwang. Jae-Sam JS; Kim. Yangmee Y
Key Findings
- Papiliocin shows strong antibacterial activity against Gram‑negative bacteria with very low toxicity to mammalian cells
- It suppresses inflammatory responses in macrophages by lowering nitric oxide, TNF‑α, and MIP‑2 production, comparable to LL‑37
- NMR reveals an α‑helical structure with key Trp2 and Phe5 residues that drive membrane interaction
Practical Outcomes
- While papiliocin isn’t ready for personal use, the findings highlight a peptide that could become a safe antimicrobial and anti‑inflammatory supplement in the future. For now, biohackers can note that targeting similar mechanisms (e.g., using LL‑37 analogs) may be a viable strategy, and they should watch for follow‑up studies on dosing and safety in humans.
Summary
Papiliocin is a newly discovered 37‑amino‑acid peptide from a butterfly that can kill bacteria—especially Gram‑negative ones—while being gentle on human cells, and it also cuts down inflammation markers in immune cells, acting much like the well‑known human peptide LL‑37. The study maps its shape and shows which parts help it stick to bacterial membranes, laying groundwork for future drug development, but it’s still early‑stage lab work.
Abstract
Papiliocin is a novel 37-residue cecropin-like peptide isolated recently from the swallowtail butterfly, Papilio xuthus. With the aim of identifying a potent antimicrobial peptide, we tested papiliocin in a variety of biological and biophysical assays, demonstrating that the peptide possesses very low cytotoxicity against mammalian cells and high bacterial cell selectivity, particularly against Gram-negative bacteria as well as high anti-inflammatory activity. Using LPS-stimulated macrophage RAW264.7 cells, we found that papiliocin exerted its anti-inflammatory activities by inhibiting nitric oxide (NO) production and secretion of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α and macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-2, producing effects comparable with those of the antimicrobial peptide LL-37. We also showed that the innate defense response mechanisms engaged by papiliocin involve Toll-like receptor pathways that culminate in the nuclear translocation of NF-κB. Fluorescent dye leakage experiments showed that papiliocin targets the bacterial cell membrane. To understand structure-activity relationships, we determined the three-dimensional structure of papiliocin in 300 mm dodecylphosphocholine micelles by NMR spectroscopy, showing that papiliocin has an α-helical structure from Lys(3) to Lys(21) and from Ala(25) to Val(36), linked by a hinge region. Interactions between the papiliocin and LPS studied using tryptophan blue-shift data, and saturation transfer difference-NMR experiments revealed that Trp(2) and Phe(5) at the N-terminal helix play an important role in attracting papiliocin to the cell membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. In conclusion, we have demonstrated that papiliocin is a potent peptide antibiotic with both anti-inflammatory and antibacterial activities, and we have laid the groundwork for future studies of its mechanism of action.
Study Information
pubmed
2011
2011-09-29T00:00:00.000Z
10.1074/jbc.m111.269225