| Literature DB >> 30086240 |
Vedran Milosavljevic1,2, Yazan Haddad1,2, Amitava Moulick1,2, Hana Buchtelova1,2, Roman Guran1,2, Tomas Pospisil3, Kamila Stokowa-Sołtys4, Zbynek Heger1,2, Lukas Richtera1,2, Pavel Kopel1,2, Vojtech Adam1,2.
Abstract
Novicidin (NVC), is a membrane-penetrating peptide, which forms a stable complex with Zn-Schiff base with interesting antitumor selectivity. We studied NVC derivatives to determine functional roles of key amino acids in toxicity, helicity, and binding of the Zn-Schiff base complex. Trimmed derivatives highlighted the role of peptide length and helicity in toxicity and membrane penetration. The removal of Lys from position 1 and 2 strongly increases the ability to disrupt the membranes. The trimming of the N-terminal residues significantly increases the stability of peptide helicity enhancing penetrating properties. Gly residue derivatives undermined a role of peptide bending in membrane penetration and toxicity. After the substitution of the central Gly derivatives with Ile or Lys, the peptides retained toxicity. These results illustrate the minor role of central helix bending in NVC toxicity. Binding-site-peptide derivatives identified His residue as the sole Zn-Schiff base binding site and eliminated the role of other aromatic residues.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30086240 DOI: 10.1021/acs.bioconjchem.8b00370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioconjug Chem ISSN: 1043-1802 Impact factor: 4.774