Design of short membrane selective antimicrobial peptides containing tryptophan and arginine residues for improved activity, salt-resistance, and biocompatibility

Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) kill microbes by non-specific membrane permeabilization, making them ideal templates for designing novel peptide-based antibiotics that can combat multi-drug resistant pathogens. For maximum efficacy in vivo and in vitro, AMPs must be biocompatible, salt-tolerant and po...

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Main Authors: Saravanan, Rathi, Li, Xiang, Lim, Kaiyang, Mohanram, Harini, Peng, Li, Mishra, Biswajit, Basu, Anindya, Lee, Jong-Min, Bhattacharjya, Surajit, Leong, Susanna Su Jan
Other Authors: School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/102751
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/19188
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1027512020-06-01T10:01:48Z Design of short membrane selective antimicrobial peptides containing tryptophan and arginine residues for improved activity, salt-resistance, and biocompatibility Saravanan, Rathi Li, Xiang Lim, Kaiyang Mohanram, Harini Peng, Li Mishra, Biswajit Basu, Anindya Lee, Jong-Min Bhattacharjya, Surajit Leong, Susanna Su Jan School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering School of Materials Science & Engineering School of Biological Sciences DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) kill microbes by non-specific membrane permeabilization, making them ideal templates for designing novel peptide-based antibiotics that can combat multi-drug resistant pathogens. For maximum efficacy in vivo and in vitro, AMPs must be biocompatible, salt-tolerant and possess broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity. These attributes can be obtained by rational design of peptides guided by good understanding of peptide structure-function. Toward this end, this study investigates the influence of charge and hydrophobicity on the activity of tryptophan and arginine rich decamer peptides engineered from a salt resistant human β-defensin-28 variant. Mechanistic investigations of the decamers with detergents mimicking the composition of bacterial and mammalian membrane, reveal a correlation between improved antibacterial activity and the increase in tryptophan and positive residue content, while keeping hemolysis low. The potent antimicrobial activity and high cell membrane selective behavior of the two most active decamers, D5 and D6, are attributed to an optimum peptide charge to hydrophobic ratio bestowed by systematic arginine and tryptophan substitution. D5 and D6 show surface localization behavior with binding constants of 1.86 × 108 and 2.6 × 108 M−1, respectively, as determined by isothermal calorimetry measurements. NMR derived structures of D5 and D6 in SDS detergent micelles revealed proximity of Trp and Arg residues in an extended structural scaffold. Such potential cation–π interactions may be critical in cell permeabilization of the AMPs. The fundamental characterization of the engineered decamers provided in this study improves the understanding of structure–activity relationship of short arginine tryptophan rich AMPs, which will pave the way for future de novo design of potent AMPs for therapeutic and biomedical applications. 2014-04-09T05:56:10Z 2019-12-06T20:59:52Z 2014-04-09T05:56:10Z 2019-12-06T20:59:52Z 2013 2013 Journal Article Saravanan, R., Li, X., Lim, K., Mohanram, H., Peng, L., Mishra, B., et al. (2014). Design of short membrane selective antimicrobial peptides containing tryptophan and arginine residues for improved activity, salt-resistance, and biocompatibility. Biotechnology and Bioengineering, 111(1), 37-49. 0006-3592 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/102751 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/19188 10.1002/bit.25003 en Biotechnology and bioengineering © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering
Saravanan, Rathi
Li, Xiang
Lim, Kaiyang
Mohanram, Harini
Peng, Li
Mishra, Biswajit
Basu, Anindya
Lee, Jong-Min
Bhattacharjya, Surajit
Leong, Susanna Su Jan
Design of short membrane selective antimicrobial peptides containing tryptophan and arginine residues for improved activity, salt-resistance, and biocompatibility
description Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) kill microbes by non-specific membrane permeabilization, making them ideal templates for designing novel peptide-based antibiotics that can combat multi-drug resistant pathogens. For maximum efficacy in vivo and in vitro, AMPs must be biocompatible, salt-tolerant and possess broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity. These attributes can be obtained by rational design of peptides guided by good understanding of peptide structure-function. Toward this end, this study investigates the influence of charge and hydrophobicity on the activity of tryptophan and arginine rich decamer peptides engineered from a salt resistant human β-defensin-28 variant. Mechanistic investigations of the decamers with detergents mimicking the composition of bacterial and mammalian membrane, reveal a correlation between improved antibacterial activity and the increase in tryptophan and positive residue content, while keeping hemolysis low. The potent antimicrobial activity and high cell membrane selective behavior of the two most active decamers, D5 and D6, are attributed to an optimum peptide charge to hydrophobic ratio bestowed by systematic arginine and tryptophan substitution. D5 and D6 show surface localization behavior with binding constants of 1.86 × 108 and 2.6 × 108 M−1, respectively, as determined by isothermal calorimetry measurements. NMR derived structures of D5 and D6 in SDS detergent micelles revealed proximity of Trp and Arg residues in an extended structural scaffold. Such potential cation–π interactions may be critical in cell permeabilization of the AMPs. The fundamental characterization of the engineered decamers provided in this study improves the understanding of structure–activity relationship of short arginine tryptophan rich AMPs, which will pave the way for future de novo design of potent AMPs for therapeutic and biomedical applications.
author2 School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
author_facet School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Saravanan, Rathi
Li, Xiang
Lim, Kaiyang
Mohanram, Harini
Peng, Li
Mishra, Biswajit
Basu, Anindya
Lee, Jong-Min
Bhattacharjya, Surajit
Leong, Susanna Su Jan
format Article
author Saravanan, Rathi
Li, Xiang
Lim, Kaiyang
Mohanram, Harini
Peng, Li
Mishra, Biswajit
Basu, Anindya
Lee, Jong-Min
Bhattacharjya, Surajit
Leong, Susanna Su Jan
author_sort Saravanan, Rathi
title Design of short membrane selective antimicrobial peptides containing tryptophan and arginine residues for improved activity, salt-resistance, and biocompatibility
title_short Design of short membrane selective antimicrobial peptides containing tryptophan and arginine residues for improved activity, salt-resistance, and biocompatibility
title_full Design of short membrane selective antimicrobial peptides containing tryptophan and arginine residues for improved activity, salt-resistance, and biocompatibility
title_fullStr Design of short membrane selective antimicrobial peptides containing tryptophan and arginine residues for improved activity, salt-resistance, and biocompatibility
title_full_unstemmed Design of short membrane selective antimicrobial peptides containing tryptophan and arginine residues for improved activity, salt-resistance, and biocompatibility
title_sort design of short membrane selective antimicrobial peptides containing tryptophan and arginine residues for improved activity, salt-resistance, and biocompatibility
publishDate 2014
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/102751
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/19188
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