| Literature DB >> 28441741 |
Rushikesh Sable1, Pravin Parajuli2, Seetharama Jois3.
Abstract
Nature provides a variety of peptides that are expressed in most living species. Evolutionary pressure and natural selection have created and optimized these peptides to bind to receptors with high affinity. Hence, natural resources provide an abundant chemical space to be explored in peptide-based drug discovery. Marine peptides can be extracted by simple solvent extraction techniques. The advancement of analytical techniques has made it possible to obtain pure peptides from natural resources. Extracted peptides have been evaluated as possible therapeutic agents for a wide range of diseases, including antibacterial, antifungal, antidiabetic and anticancer activity as well as cardiovascular and neurotoxin activity. Although marine resources provide thousands of possible peptides, only a few peptides derived from marine sources have reached the pharmaceutical market. This review focuses on some of the peptides derived from marine sources in the past ten years and gives a brief review of those that are currently in clinical trials or on the market.Entities:
Keywords: antifungal peptides; antimicrobial peptides; extraction of peptides; marine peptides
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28441741 PMCID: PMC5408270 DOI: 10.3390/md15040124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Peptides derived from marine resources with possible therapeutic applications.
| Peptide | Number of Amino Acids/Unnatural Amino Acids/Molecular Weight | Marine Source | Possible Application | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cyclic depsipeptides Mirabamides | 3 N, 8 UNA | Sponge | Anti-HIV and antibacterial | [ |
| Papuamides A–F | 11 UNA | Sponges | Anti-HIV and cytotoxic | [ |
| Celebesides A–C and | 5 UNA | Sponge | Anti-HIV, cytotoxic, and antifungal | [ |
| Theopapuamides B–D | 2 N, 9 UNA | Sponge | Anti-HIV, cytotoxic, and antifungal | [ |
| Callipeltins | 5 N, 5 UNA | Sponge | Anti-HIV | [ |
| Callyaerins A–G, I–M | 9-12 N | Sponge | Antimicrobial, antitubercular and antiviral | [ |
| Discodermin A | 11 N, 3UNA | Sponge | Broad spectrum antifungal and antibacterial, inhibited starfish embryo development | [ |
| Theonellamide G | 7 N, 5 UNA | Red Sea sponge | Antifungal and cytotoxic | [ |
| Pipecolidepsins A and B | 3 N, 8 UNA | Sponge | Cytotoxic | [ |
| Theonellamide A–E, G | 7 N, 5 UNA | Sponge | Cytotoxic and antifungal | [ |
| Milnamide A | 3 UNA | Sponge | Antiproliferative and antitumor | [ |
| Barrettides A and B | 31 N | Sponge | Antifouling effect with barnacle larvae | [ |
| Koshikamides F–H | 4N, 13 UNA | Sponges | Anti-HIV | [ |
| Toxin of | 1800–9000 Da | Zoanthid | Neuronal function modulation | [ |
| Jellyfish collagen peptides (JCP) | 200–600 Da | Jellyfish | Antihypertensive | [ |
| Peptide Ala-Cys-Pro-Gly-Pro-Asn-Pro-Gly-Arg-Pro | 10 N | Box jellyfish | Antihypertensive | [ |
| Neurotoxin AV3 | 27 N | Sea anemone | Modulation of voltage gated sodium channel | [ |
| Kahalalide F | 8 N, 5 UNA | Mollusks | Antitumor and antifungal | [ |
| Cm-p1 and Cm-p5 | 10 N | Marine snail | Antifungal | [ |
| Crude peptide extract | Cone snail | Sleep inductive | [ | |
| Hemocyanin 1 and 2 | 38 and 24 N | Sea snail | Antiviral against herpes simplex virus (HSV) | [ |
| Neurotensin (NT) and Contulakin-G | 13 N in NT, and 15 N and 1 UNA in contulakin-G | Cone snail | Analgesic | [ |
| Peptide (Ala-His-Ile-Ile-Ile, MW: 565.3 Da) | 5 N | Tunicate | Antihypertensive, antioxidant, cytotoxic, hepatoprotective | [ |
| PC-1, PC-2 and PC-3 | 5 N | Large yellow croaker | Antioxidant | [ |
| HTP-1 | 8 N | Seahorse | Neuroprotective | [ |
| EcDefensin | 63 N | Estuary cod | Antiviral against Singapore grouper iridovirus and viral nervous necrosis virus | [ |
| Trunkamide A | 3 N and 4 UNA | Ascidian | Antitumor | [ |
| SP-A and SP-B | 9 N | Skate | Antioxidant | [ |
| Hydrolysate fractions FrA3 and FrB2 | 585.91 and 528.78 Da peptides | Skipjack tuna | Antioxidant | [ |
| Plancitoxin I | 358 N | Spine of crown of thorns starfish, | Cytotoxic and apoptotic | [ |
| Centrocins 1 and 2 | 119 and 118 N | Green sea urchin | Broad spectrum antibacterial | [ |
| SpHyastatin | 135 N | Mud crab | Antibacterial | [ |
| Scygonadin | 102 N | Mud crab | Antibacterial and immune booster, antiviral against white spot syndrome virus | [ |
| Histone H2A derivative sphistin | 38 N | Mud crab | Antimicrobial | [ |
| Shrimp anti-lipopolysaccharide factor (SALF) | 24 N | Shrimp | Increased expression of immune cells in mice, can be used as adjuvant in cancer vaccine, antibacterial | [ |
| Ls-Stylicin1 | 82 N | Shrimp | Antibacterial, antifungal | [ |
| Cyclic lipopeptides, Maribasins A and B | 7 N and 1 UNA | Fermentation broth of the marine | Broad spectrum antifungal | [ |
| JBIR-34 and JBIR-35 | 4 UNA | Sponge derived actinomycete | Antibacterial, cytotoxic | [ |
| Mojavensin A, iso-C16 fengycin B, and anteiso-C17 fengycin B | 7 N and 1 UNA | Bacterium | Cytotoxic, antifungal | [ |
| Thalassospiramides A, D and G | (1, 4 and 2 NA) and (6, 3 and 5 UNA) | Bacteria | Anti-inflammatory | [ |
| Hormaomycins B and C | 2 N and 6 UNA | Mudflat-derived | Antibacterial | [ |
| Aminolipopeptides Trichoderins A, A1 and B | 2 N and 6 UNA | Marine sponge-derived fungus of | Antimycobacterial activity against | [ |
| Terrelumamides A and B | 1 N | Marine fungi | Antidiabetic (increased insulin sensitivity) | [ |
| PPY1 | 5 N | Algae | Anti-inflammatory | [ |
N, Natural amino acids; UNA, unnatural amino acids.
Figure 1A schematic representation of the general extraction procedure for marine peptides. * Stages where bioassays are performed for screening.
Figure 2A schematic representation of the solvent gradient extraction procedure of different components from natural marine sources. Adapted from Riguera, R. J. Mar. Biotechnol. 1997, 5, 187–193.
Optimal conditions for different proteolytic enzymes for hydrolysis reaction [93,94,113].
| Major Source | Proteolytic Enzyme | pH | Temperature (°C) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Animals | Trypsin | 8.0 | 37 |
| Pepsin | 2.0 | 37 | |
| α-Chymotrypsin | 8.0 | 37 | |
| Plants | Papain | 6.5 | 50 |
| Microorganisms | Alcalase | 9.5 | 50 |
| Neutrase | 7.0 | 60 | |
| Flavourzyme | 7.0 | 55 | |
| Protamex | 6.0 | 40 | |
| Kojizyme | 6.0 | 40 |
Figure 3Classification of marine sources of peptides/peptidomimetics and their possible therapeutic applications.
Figure 4Callyaerin, a cyclic peptide derived from Indonesian sponge. Adapted and reproduced with permission from Elsevier, Ibrahim et al. Bioorg. Med. Chem. 2010, 18, 4947–4956.
Figure 5Peptides derived from the marine sponge Discodermia calyx. Reprinted with permission from Kimura et al. J. Nat. Prod. 2012, 75, 290–294. Copyright (2012) American Chemical Society.
Figure 6Antifungal and cytotoxic bicyclic dodecapeptides obtained from a marine sponge of Theonella species. Adapted from Youssef et al. Mar. Drugs 2014, 12, 1911–1923. Reprinted with permission from Matsunaga et al. J. Org. Chem. 1995, 60, 1177–1181. Copyright (1995) American Chemical Society.
Figure 7Pipecolidepsins A and B; cyclic depsipeptides identified from the extraction of the Madagascan Sponge Homophymia lamellose. Reprinted with permission from Coello et al. J. Nat. Prod. 2014, 77, 298–303. Copyright (2014) American Chemical Society.
Figure 8Cyclic depsipeptides known as didemnins identified from the extraction of the Caribbean tunicate Trididemnum solidum. Reprinted with permission from Xu et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2012, 134, 8625–8632. Copyright (2012) American Chemical Society.
Figure 9Peptidomimetics terrelumamides A (1) and B (2) isolated from the marine fungus Aspergillus terreus. Adapted from You et al. Mar. Drugs 2015, 13, 1290–1303.
Marine-derived peptides that are on the market or in clinical trial.
| Marine Peptides in Clinical Trial and on the Market | Marine Source | Therapeutic Application | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ziconotide | Marine cone snail | Analgesic drug (FDA-approved) | [ |
| Brentuximab Vedotin | Marine mollusk | Anticancer (FDA-approved) | [ |
| Kahalalide F | Mollusk | Anticancer (phase I clinical study) | [ |
| Elisidepsin (PM02734) | Synthetic analogue of kahalalide F | Malignant solid tumors (phase I clinical study) | [ |
| Tasidotin (ILX-651) | Dolastatin 15 synthetic analogues, marine mollusk | Solid tumors, microtubule | [ |
| Glembatumumab Vedotin | Derivative of dolastatin 10, marine mollusk | Phase I/II for treatment of breast cancer | [ |
| Soblidotin (TZT-1027) | Derivative of dolastatin 10, marine mollusk | Phase II clinical trial for soft tissue sarcoma | [ |
| E7974 | Derivative of hemiasterlin, sponge | Phase I study of colorectal, prostate, and larynx carcinomas; recommended for phase II | [ |
| HTI-286 | Derivative of hemiasterlin, sponge | Metastatic prostate cancer (preclinical study) | [ |
| XEN-2174 | Derivative of ziconotide, marine cone snail | Analgesic (phase I-II open label study) | [ |
| Plitidepsin | Ascidian | Anticancer (phase I/II clinical study) | [ |
Figure 10Structure of brentuximab vedotin. Adapted and reproduced with permission from Peter D Senter, Eric L Sievers. Nat. Biotechnol. 2012, 30, 631–637. Copyright (2012) Nature Publishing Group. mAb, monoclonal antibody; Val-Cit, Valine-Citrulline (linker); PABC, p-aminobenzyloxycarbonyl (spacer); MMAE, Monomethylauristatin E (a synthetic antineoplastic agent).
Figure 11Derivative of didemnin known as Aplidine (Plitidepsin). Reprinted with permission from Adrio et al. J. Org. Chem. 2007, 72, 5129–5138. Copyright (2007) American Chemical Society.