| Literature DB >> 17384140 |
Jianxu Li1, Cheng Zhang, Xueqing Xu, Jie Wang, Haining Yu, Ren Lai, Weimin Gong.
Abstract
The disulfide-bridged hendecapeptide (CWTKSIPPKPC) loop, derived from an amphibian skin peptide, is found to have strong trypsin inhibitory capability. This loop, called the trypsin inhibitory loop (TIL), appears to be the smallest serine protease inhibitor known. A series of synthetic peptides derived from this loop also exhibits trypsin inhibitory activity; some peptides even exhibit both antimicrobial and trypsin inhibitory activities. Antimicrobial peptides are attractive candidates for producing novel antibiotics, but their sensitivity to trypsin-like proteases appreciably limits their application. Bifunctional peptides with both antimicrobial and trypsin inhibitory activities could be ideal candidates for clinical antibiotics, since these reported synthetic peptides have shown resistance against trypsin. The crystal structure of a complex of trypsin with one TIL derivative is solved. The concept of TIL is introduced in this paper. Novel trypsin inhibitors or antimicrobial peptides can be designed readily on the basis of the TIL. Furthermore, functional analysis and a precursor comparison suggest that serine protease inhibitors may have a common ancestor with antimicrobial peptides.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17384140 DOI: 10.1096/fj.06-7966com
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FASEB J ISSN: 0892-6638 Impact factor: 5.191