A peptide from human β thymosin as a platform for the development of new anti-biofilm agents for Staphylococcus spp. and Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
Schillaci. Domenico D; Spinello. Angelo A; Cusimano. Maria Grazia MG; Cascioferro. Stella S; Barone. Giampaolo G; Vitale. Maria M; Arizza. Vincenzo V
Key Findings
- The peptide fragment (EIEKFDKSKLK) inhibited growth of Staphylococcus species and Pseudomonas aeruginosa at 6.2‑12.5 mg/ml.
- It reduced biofilm formation at lower, sub‑inhibitory levels (0.75‑3.1 mg/ml).
- Molecular dynamics simulations suggest the peptide interacts with bacterial membranes via a hydrophobic core and charged edges.
Practical Outcomes
- At present the peptide is a laboratory lead, not a ready‑to‑use supplement or treatment. No safe human dosage or delivery method is known, so biohackers cannot apply it directly. Future work may produce more potent derivatives, but for now it offers limited actionable insight for health‑optimization routines.
Summary
Scientists tested a short piece of the human protein thymosin‑beta‑4 and found it can kill some bacteria and stop them from forming protective biofilms in lab dishes, but only at relatively high concentrations and only in test‑tube experiments.
Abstract
Conventional antibiotics might fail in the treatment of biofilm-associated infections causing infection recurrence and chronicity. The search for antimicrobial peptides has been performed with the aim to discover novel anti-infective agents active on pathogens in both planktonic and biofilm associated forms. The fragment 9-19 of human thymosin β4 was studied through 1 μs MD simulation. Two main conformations of the peptide were detected, both constituted by a central hydrophobic core and by the presence of peripheral charged residues suggesting a possible mechanism of interaction with two models of biological membranes, related to eukaryotic or bacterial membrane respectively. In addition, the peptide was chemically synthesized and its antimicrobial activity was tested in vitro against planktonic and biofilm form of a group of reference strains of Staphylococcus spp. and one P. aeruginosa strain. The human thymosin β4 fragment EIEKFDKSKLK showed antibacterial activity against staphylococcal strains and Pseudomonas aeruginosa ATCC 15442 at concentrations from 12.5 to 6.2 mg/ml and inhibited biofilm formation at sub-inhibitory concentrations (3.1-0.75 mg/ml). The activity of the fragment in inhibiting biofilm formation, could be due to the conformations highlighted by the MD simulations, suggesting its interaction with the bacterial membrane. Human thymosin β4 fragment can be considered a promising lead compound to develop novel synthetic or recombinant derivatives with improved pharmaceutical potential.
Study Information
pubmed
2016
2016-06-23T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s11274-016-2096-2
54