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LL-37

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

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2009 pubmed 15 citations

Structure, dynamics and mapping of membrane-binding residues of micelle-bound antimicrobial peptides by natural abundance (13)C NMR spectroscopy.

Wang. Guangshun G

Key Findings

  • Natural‑abundance 13C NMR can map membrane‑binding residues of micelle‑bound peptides
  • LL‑37‑derived peptides show a characteristic HSQC wave where hydrophobic residues appear as low‑intensity troughs
  • Phenylalanine residues are critical for membrane binding, and mutating a key hydrophobic residue to alanine reduces antibacterial activity

Practical Outcomes

  • If you’re tinkering with LL‑37 or similar peptides, keep the phenylalanine and other hydrophobic residues unchanged to preserve antimicrobial strength. The HSQC‑wave pattern can be used as a quick check (if you have the right NMR setup) to see if new variants still bind membranes effectively.

Summary

The study shows a new NMR trick that lets scientists see which parts of antimicrobial peptides like LL‑37 stick to cell‑like membranes. It finds that the aromatic phenylalanine spots are especially important for binding, and swapping a key hydrophobic piece for alanine makes the peptide much weaker against bacteria.

Abstract

Worldwide bacterial resistance to traditional antibiotics has drawn much research attention to naturally occurring antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) owing to their potential as alternative antimicrobials. Structural studies of AMPs are essential for an in-depth understanding of their activity, mechanism of action, and in guiding peptide design. Two-dimensional solution proton NMR spectroscopy has been the major tool. In this article, we describe the applications of natural abundance (13)C NMR spectroscopy that provides complementary information to 2D (1)H NMR. The correlation of (13)Calpha secondary shifts with both 3D structure and heteronuclear (15)N NOE values indicates that natural abundance carbon chemical shifts are useful probes for backbone structure and dynamics of membrane peptides. Using human LL-37-derived peptides (GF-17, KR-12, and RI-10), as well as amphibian antimicrobial and anticancer peptide aurein 1.2 and its analog LLAA, as models, we show that the cross peak intensity plots of 2D (1)H-(13)Calpha HSQC spectra versus residue number present a wave-like pattern (HSQC wave) where key hydrophobic residues of micelle-bound peptides are located in the troughs with weaker intensities, probably due to fast exchange between the free and bound forms. In all the cases, the identification of aromatic phenylalanines as a key membrane-binding residue is consistent with previous intermolecular Phe-lipid NOE observations. Furthermore, mutation of one of the key hydrophobic residues of KR-12 to Ala significantly reduced the antibacterial activity of the peptide mutants. These results illustrate that natural abundance heteronuclear-correlated NMR spectroscopy can be utilized to probe backbone structure and dynamics, and perhaps to map key membrane-binding residues of peptides in complex with micelles. (1)H-(13)Calpha HSQC wave, along with other NMR waves such as dipolar wave and chemical shift wave, offers novel insights into peptide-membrane interactions from different angles.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2009

Date

2009-08-12T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.bbamem.2009.07.028

Citations

15

References

75