Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have been considered as potential therapeutic sources of future antibiotics because of their broad-spectrum activities and different mechanisms of action compared to conventional antibiotics. Although AMPs possess considerable benefits as new generation antibiotics, their clinical and commercial development still have some limitations, such as potential toxicity, susceptibility to proteases, and high cost of peptide production. In order to overcome those obstacles, extensive efforts have been carried out. For instance, unusual amino acids or peptido-mimetics are introduced to avoid the proteolytic degradation and the design of short peptides retaining antimicrobial activities is proposed as a solution for the cost issue. In this review, we focus on small peptides, especially those with less than twelve amino acids, and provide an overview of the relationships between their three-dimensional structures and antimicrobial activities. The efforts to develop highly active AMPs with shorter sequences are also described.
Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors (InsP3R) and ryanodine receptors (RyR) are tetrameric intracellular Ca2+ channels1. For each, the pore is formed by C-terminal transmembrane domains and regulated by signals detected by the large cytosolic structures. InsP3R gating is initiated by InsP3 binding to the InsP3-binding core (IBC, residues 224-604 of InsP3R1)2 and it requires the suppressor domain (SD, residues 1-223)2-8. We present structures of the N-terminal region (NT) of InsP3R1 with (3.6 Å) and without (3.0 Å) InsP3 bound. The arrangement of the three NT domains, the SD, IBC-β and IBC-α, identifies two discrete interfaces (α and β) between the IBC and SD. Similar interfaces occur between equivalent domains (A, B and C) in RyR19. The orientations of the three domains docked into a tetrameric structure of InsP3R10 and of the ABC domains in RyR9 are remarkably similar. The importance of the α-interface for activation of InsP3R and RyR is confirmed by mutagenesis and, for RyR, by disease-causing mutations9,11,12. InsP3 causes partial closure of the clam-like IBC, disrupting the β-interface and pulling the SD towards the IBC. This reorients an exposed SD loop (HS-loop) that is essential for InsP3R activation7. The loop is conserved in RyR and includes mutations associated with malignant hyperthermia and central core disease9,11,12. The HS-loop interacts with an adjacent NT, suggesting that activation re-arranges inter-subunit interactions. The A-domain of RyR functionally replaced the SD in a full-length InsP3R, and an InsP3R in which its C-terminal transmembrane region was replaced by that from RyR1 was gated by InsP3 and blocked by ryanodine. Activation mechanisms are conserved between InsP3R and RyR. Allosteric modulation of two similar domain interfaces within an N-terminal subunit re-orients the first domain (SD or A-domain), allowing it, via interactions of the second domain of an adjacent subunit (IBC-β or B-domain), to gate the pore.
As part of an effort to develop new, low molecular mass peptide antibiotics, we searched for the shortest bioactive analogue of gaegurin 5 (GGN5), a 24-residue antimicrobial peptide. Thirty-one kinds of GGN5 analogues were synthesized, and their biological activities were analyzed against diverse microorganisms and human erythrocytes. The structural properties of the peptides in various solutions were characterized by spectroscopic methods. The N-terminal 13 residues of GGN5 were identified as the minimal requirement for biological activity. The helical stability, the amphipathic property, and the hydrophobic N terminus were characterized as the important structural factors driving the activity. To develop shorter antibiotic peptides, amino acid substitutions in an inactive 11-residue analogue were examined. Single tryptophanyl substitutions at certain positions yielded some active 11-residue analogues. The most effective site for the substitution was the hydrophobic-hydrophilic interface in the amphipathic helical structure. At this position, tryptophan was the most useful amino acid conferring favorable activity to the peptide. The introduced tryptophan played an important anchoring role for the membrane interaction of the peptides. Finally, two 11-residue analogues of GGN5, which exhibited strong bactericidal activity with little hemolytic activity, were obtained as property-optimized candidates for new peptide antibiotic development. Altogether, the present approach not only characterized some important factors for the antimicrobial activity but also provided useful information about peptide engineering to search for potent lead molecules for new peptide antibiotic development.Most organisms produce membrane-active peptides that exhibit antibiotic, fungicidal, hemolytic, virucidal, and tumoricidal activities (1, 2). It is becoming clear through many studies that antimicrobial peptides are an important component of the innate defenses of all species of life (3-8). Antimicrobial peptides function by interacting with the cell membrane (1-6). In particular, cationic, linear, helical peptides, which are the most well characterized group of antimicrobial peptides, function by the "barrel-stave" and/or "carpet-like" mechanism, leading to bacterial membrane permeation (1, 5, 9 -13). In membrane environments, the peptides generally adopt an amphipathic helical structure, positioning the hydrophobic residues on one side and the hydrophilic residues on the other side of the helical axis, whereas they assume a random coil conformation in aqueous solutions.Recently, antimicrobial peptides have become a potential source of new antibiotics to combat the increasing emergence of drug-resistant bacteria (4, 5). Several antimicrobial peptides such as magainin, a 23-residue antimicrobial peptide, have been successful in pharmaceutical and commercial development (5). Particularly, from the first discovery of bombinins in Bombina variegata (7), the skin of anurans (frogs and toads) has proven to be a rich source of peptides with ...
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