4.6 Article

In Vitro and In Vivo Anti-Candida Activity and Structural Analysis of Killer Peptide (KP)-Derivatives

Journal

JOURNAL OF FUNGI
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jof7020129

Keywords

antifungal peptides; Candida albicans; circular dichroism spectroscopy; confocal microscopy; electron microscopy; Galleria mellonella model; self-assembly peptides; structure-function relationship

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The study analyzed the biological and structural properties of peptides derived from killer peptide (KP) and found that changing the first amino acid residue can affect the conformation of the peptide and its activity against Candida. The peptides were able to penetrate C. albicans cells and cause significant morphological alterations, indicating potential as antimicrobial agents.
The previously described decapeptide AKVTMTCSAS (killer peptide, KP), derived from the variable region of a recombinant yeast killer toxin-like anti-idiotypic antibody, proved to exert a variety of antimicrobial, antiviral, and immunomodulatory activities. It also showed a peculiar self-assembly ability, likely responsible for the therapeutic effect in animal models of systemic and mucosal candidiasis. The present study analyzed the biological and structural properties of peptides derived from KP by substitution or deletion of the first residue, leaving unchanged the remaining amino acids. The investigated peptides proved to exert differential in vitro and/or in vivo anti-Candida activity without showing toxic effects on mammalian cells. The change of the first residue in KP amino acidic sequence affected the conformation of the resulting peptides in solution, as assessed by circular dichroism spectroscopy. KP-derivatives, except one, were able to induce apoptosis in yeast cells, like KP itself. ROS production and changes in mitochondrial transmembrane potential were also observed. Confocal and transmission electron microscopy studies allowed to establish that selected peptides could penetrate within C. albicans cells and cause gross morphological alterations. Overall, the physical and chemical properties of the first residue were found to be important for peptide conformation, candidacidal activity and possible mechanism of action. Small antimicrobial peptides could be exploited for the development of a new generation of antifungal drugs, given their relative low cost and ease of production as well as the possibility of devising novel delivery systems.

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