4.6 Review

A Therapeutic Potential of Animal β-hairpin Antimicrobial Peptides

Journal

CURRENT MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 24, Issue 17, Pages 1724-1746

Publisher

BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.2174/0929867324666170424124416

Keywords

Antimicrobial peptides; host defense; innate immunity; peptide therapeutics; beta-hairpin structure; disulfide bridge

Funding

  1. Russian Science Foundation [14-50-00131]
  2. Russian Science Foundation [14-50-00131] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation

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Endogenous antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are evolutionary ancient molecular factors of innate immunity that play the key role in host defense. Because of the low resistance rate, AMPs have caught extensive attention as possible alternatives to conventional antibiotics. Over the last years, it has become evident that biological functions of AMPs are beyond direct killing of microbial cells. This review focuses on a relatively small family of animal host defense peptides with the beta-hairpin structure stabilized by disulfide bridges. Their small size, rigid structure, stability to proteases, and plethora of biological functions, including antibacterial, antifungal, antiviral, anticancer, endotoxin-binding, metabolism-and immune-modulating activities, make natural beta-hairpin AMPs an attractive molecular basis for drug design.

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