Literature DB >> 30260702

Self-derived structure-disrupting peptides targeting methionine aminopeptidase in pathogenic bacteria: a new strategy to generate antimicrobial peptides.

Jian Zhan1, Husen Jia1, Evgeny A Semchenko1, Yunqiang Bian2, Amy M Zhou3, Zhixiu Li4, Yuedong Yang1, Jihua Wang2, Sohinee Sarkar5, Makrina Totsika5, Helen Blanchard1, Freda E-C Jen1, Qizhuang Ye6,7, Thomas Haselhorst1, Michael P Jennings1, Kate L Seib1, Yaoqi Zhou1,2,4.   

Abstract

Bacterial infection is one of the leading causes of death in young, elderly, and immune-compromised patients. The rapid spread of multi-drug-resistant (MDR) bacteria is a global health emergency and there is a lack of new drugs to control MDR pathogens. We describe a heretofore-unexplored discovery pathway for novel antibiotics that is based on self-targeting, structure-disrupting peptides. We show that a helical peptide, KFF- EcH3, derived from the Escherichia coli methionine aminopeptidase can disrupt secondary and tertiary structure of this essential enzyme, thereby killing the bacterium (including MDR strains). Significantly, no detectable resistance developed against this peptide. Based on a computational analysis, our study predicted that peptide KFF- EcH3 has the strongest interaction with the structural core of the methionine aminopeptidase. We further used our approach to identify peptide KFF- NgH1 to target the same enzyme from Neisseria gonorrhoeae. This peptide inhibited bacterial growth and was able to treat a gonococcal infection in a human cervical epithelial cell model. These findings present an exciting new paradigm in antibiotic discovery using self-derived peptides that can be developed to target the structures of any essential bacterial proteins.-Zhan, J., Jia, H., Semchenko, E. A., Bian, Y., Zhou, A. M., Li, Z., Yang, Y., Wang, J., Sarkar, S., Totsika, M., Blanchard, H., Jen, F. E.-C., Ye, Q., Haselhorst, T., Jennings, M. P., Seib, K. L., Zhou, Y. Self-derived structure-disrupting peptides targeting methionine aminopeptidase in pathogenic bacteria: a new strategy to generate antimicrobial peptides.

Entities:  

Keywords:  antibiotic resistance; protein-specific denaturation

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30260702      PMCID: PMC6338635          DOI: 10.1096/fj.201700613RR

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  FASEB J        ISSN: 0892-6638            Impact factor:   5.834


  37 in total

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