Antimicrobial activities of heparin-binding peptides.
Andersson. Emma E; Rydengård. Victoria V; Sonesson. Andreas A; Mörgelin. Matthias M; Björck. Lars L; Schmidtchen. Artur A
Key Findings
- Peptides that bind heparin (including parts of LL‑37) have strong antimicrobial activity against both Gram‑positive and Gram‑negative bacteria and the fungus Candida albicans.
- Specific structural features—high positive charge, amphipathic character, and known heparin‑binding motifs (Cardin‑Weintraub sequences)—are linked to this antimicrobial effect.
- These motifs can be used as templates to create new synthetic antimicrobial peptides or to fish out hidden antimicrobial agents from complex biological mixtures.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY biohackers, the takeaway is that looking for or engineering short, positively charged, amphipathic sequences that bind heparin could be a shortcut to discovering new antimicrobial compounds. While the paper doesn’t give dosing or safety data, it suggests a design rule for building or screening peptide‑based “micro‑defenses” that could be tested in personal experiments.
Summary
The study shows that short protein fragments that stick to heparin (a sugar‑rich molecule) also kill bacteria and fungi. By looking at the charge, shape, and common patterns of these fragments, researchers found that many naturally occurring proteins contain hidden antimicrobial tricks. This insight could help design new, tiny “bio‑hacks” that fight infections.
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides are effector molecules of the innate immune system. We recently showed that the human antimicrobial peptides alpha-defensin and LL-37 bind to glycosaminoglycans (heparin and dermatan sulphate). Here we demonstrate the obverse, i.e. structural motifs associated with heparin affinity (cationicity, amphipaticity, and consensus regions) may confer antimicrobial properties to a given peptide. Thus, heparin-binding peptides derived from laminin isoforms, von Willebrand factor, vitronectin, protein C inhibitor, and fibronectin, exerted antimicrobial activities against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. Similar results were obtained using heparin-binding peptides derived from complement factor C3 as well as consensus sequences for heparin-binding (Cardin and Weintraub motifs). These sequence motifs, and additional peptides, also killed the fungus Candida albicans. These data will have implications for the search for novel antimicrobial peptides and utilization of heparin-protein interactions should be helpful in the identification and purification of novel antimicrobial peptides from complex biological mixtures. Finally, consensus regions may serve as templates for de novo synthesis of novel antimicrobial molecules.
Study Information
pubmed
2004
10.1111/j.1432-1033.2004.04035.x