학술논문

Helical antimicrobial polypeptides with radial amphiphilicity
Document Type
article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 112(43)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Chemical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Antimicrobial Resistance
Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides
Gram-Negative Bacteria
Gram-Positive Bacteria
Microbial Sensitivity Tests
antimicrobial peptide
alpha-helix
polypeptides
radial amphiphilicity
bacteria
α-helix
Language
Abstract
α-Helical antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) generally have facially amphiphilic structures that may lead to undesired peptide interactions with blood proteins and self-aggregation due to exposed hydrophobic surfaces. Here we report the design of a class of cationic, helical homo-polypeptide antimicrobials with a hydrophobic internal helical core and a charged exterior shell, possessing unprecedented radial amphiphilicity. The radially amphiphilic structure enables the polypeptide to bind effectively to the negatively charged bacterial surface and exhibit high antimicrobial activity against both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. Moreover, the shielding of the hydrophobic core by the charged exterior shell decreases nonspecific interactions with eukaryotic cells, as evidenced by low hemolytic activity, and protects the polypeptide backbone from proteolytic degradation. The radially amphiphilic polypeptides can also be used as effective adjuvants, allowing improved permeation of commercial antibiotics in bacteria and enhanced antimicrobial activity by one to two orders of magnitude. Designing AMPs bearing this unprecedented, unique radially amphiphilic structure represents an alternative direction of AMP development; radially amphiphilic polypeptides may become a general platform for developing AMPs to treat drug-resistant bacteria.