4.6 Article

Occurrence and evolutionary conservation analysis of α-helical cationic amphiphilic segments in the human proteome

Journal

FEBS JOURNAL
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/febs.16997

Keywords

anticancer peptides; antimicrobial peptides; cryptides; encrypted peptides

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The existence of antimicrobial encrypted fragments in human proteins has been demonstrated, and algorithms have been developed to identify these segments on a large scale. These fragments are typically cationic and amphiphilic segments that exert antimicrobial activity by disrupting membranes. The study found that about 2% of all human proteins contain these segments, with a higher prevalence in transmembrane and peripheral membrane proteins. These segments have conservation scores similar to other residues with similar solvent accessibility.
The existence of encrypted fragments with antimicrobial activity in human proteins has been thoroughly demonstrated in the literature. Recently, algorithms for the large-scale identification of these segments in whole proteomes were developed, and the pervasiveness of this phenomenon was stated. These algorithms typically mine encrypted cationic and amphiphilic segments of proteins, which, when synthesized as individual polypeptide sequences, exert antimicrobial activity by membrane disruption. In the present report, the human reference proteome was submitted to the software kamal for the uncovering of protein segments that correspond to putative intragenic antimicrobial peptides (IAPs). The assessment of the identity of these segments, frequency, functional classes of parent proteins, structural relevance, and evolutionary conservation of amino acid residues within their corresponding proteins was conducted in silico. Additionally, the antimicrobial and anticancer activity of six selected synthetic peptides was evaluated. Our results indicate that cationic and amphiphilic segments can be found in 2% of all human proteins, but are more common in transmembrane and peripheral membrane proteins. These segments are surface-exposed basic patches whose amino acid residues present similar conservation scores to other residues with similar solvent accessibility. Moreover, the antimicrobial and anticancer activity of the synthetic putative IAP sequences was irrespective to whether these are associated to membranes in the cellular setting. Our study discusses these findings in light of the current understanding of encrypted peptide sequences, offering some insights into the relevance of these segments to the organism in the context of their harboring proteins or as separate polypeptide sequences.

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