4.7 Article

Mechanism of Action and Therapeutic Potential of the β-Hairpin Antimicrobial Peptide Capitellacin from the Marine Polychaeta Capitella teleta

期刊

MARINE DRUGS
卷 20, 期 3, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/md20030167

关键词

antimicrobial peptide; capitellacin; site-directed mutagenesis; antimicrobial resistance; antibiofilm activity

资金

  1. Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation [075-15-2021-1049]

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This study investigated the mechanism of action and therapeutic potential of an antimicrobial peptide derived from a marine polychaete. The peptide exhibited strong activity against bacterial pathogens, including drug-resistant strains, and could prevent and destroy bacterial biofilms. With low toxicity towards mammalian cells, it holds promise as a potential scaffold for the development of drugs to treat chronic E. coli infections.
Among the most potent and proteolytically resistant antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) of animal origin are molecules forming a beta-hairpin structure stabilized by disulfide bonds. In this study, we investigated the mechanism of action and therapeutic potential of the beta-hairpin AMP from the marine polychaeta Capitella teleta, named capitellacin. The peptide exhibits a low cytotoxicity toward mammalian cells and a pronounced activity against a wide range of bacterial pathogens including multi-resistant bacteria, but the mechanism of its antibacterial action is still obscure. In view of this, we obtained analogs of capitellacin and tachyplesin-inspired chimeric variants to identify amino acid residues important for biological activities. A low hydrophobicity of the beta-turn region in capitellacin determines its modest membranotropic activity and slow membrane permeabilization. Electrochemical measurements in planar lipid bilayers mimicking the E. coli membrane were consistent with the detergent-like mechanism of action rather than with binding to a specific molecular target in the cell. The peptide did not induce bacterial resistance after a 21-day selection experiment, which also pointed at a membranotropic mechanism of action. We also found that capitellacin can both prevent E. coli biofilm formation and destroy preformed mature biofilms. The marked antibacterial and antibiofilm activity of capitellacin along with its moderate adverse effects on mammalian cells make this peptide a promising scaffold for the development of drugs for the treatment of chronic E. coli infections, in particular those caused by the formation of biofilms.

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