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Structural determinants of antimicrobial and antiplasmodial activity and selectivity in histidine-rich amphipathic cationic peptides
Authors:Mason A James  Moussaoui Wardi  Abdelrahman Tamer  Boukhari Alyae  Bertani Philippe  Marquette Arnaud  Shooshtarizaheh Peiman  Moulay Gilles  Boehm Nelly  Guerold Bernard  Sawers Ruairidh J H  Kichler Antoine  Metz-Boutigue Marie-Hélène  Candolfi Ermanno  Prévost Gilles  Bechinger Burkhard
Institution:Université Louis Pasteur/CNRS, UMR7177, Institut de Chimie, 4 Rue Blaise Pascal, F-67070 Strasbourg, France. james.mason@kcl.ac.uk
Abstract:Designed histidine-rich amphipathic cationic peptides, such as LAH4, have enhanced membrane disruption and antibiotic properties when the peptide adopts an alignment parallel to the membrane surface. Although this was previously achieved by lowering the pH, here we have designed a new generation of histidine-rich peptides that adopt a surface alignment at neutral pH. In vitro, this new generation of peptides are powerful antibiotics in terms of the concentrations required for antibiotic activity; the spectrum of target bacteria, fungi, and parasites; and the speed with which they kill. Further modifications to the peptides, including the addition of more hydrophobic residues at the N terminus, the inclusion of a helix-breaking proline residue or using D-amino acids as building blocks, modulated the biophysical properties of the peptides and led to substantial changes in toxicity to human and parasite cells but had only a minimal effect on the antibacterial and antifungal activity. Using a range of biophysical methods, in particular solid-state NMR, we show that the peptides are highly efficient at disrupting the anionic lipid component of model membranes. However, we also show that effective pore formation in such model membranes may be related to, but is not essential for, high antimicrobial activity by cationic amphipathic helical peptides. The information in this study comprises a new layer of detail in the understanding of the action of cationic helical antimicrobial peptides and shows that rational design is capable of producing potentially therapeutic membrane active peptides with properties tailored to their function.
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