| Literature DB >> 30353555 |
Jiajun Wang1, Xiujing Dou1, Jing Song1, Yinfeng Lyu1, Xin Zhu1, Lin Xu1, Weizhong Li1, Anshan Shan1.
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), critical components of the innate immune system, are widely distributed throughout the animal and plant kingdoms. They can protect against a broad array of infection-causing agents, such as bacteria, fungi, parasites, viruses, and tumor cells, and also exhibit immunomodulatory activity. AMPs exert antimicrobial activities primarily through mechanisms involving membrane disruption, so they have a lower likelihood of inducing drug resistance. Extensive studies on the structure-activity relationship have revealed that net charge, hydrophobicity, and amphipathicity are the most important physicochemical and structural determinants endowing AMPs with antimicrobial potency and cell selectivity. This review summarizes the recent advances in AMPs development with respect to characteristics, structure-activity relationships, functions, antimicrobial mechanisms, expression regulation, and applications in food, medicine, and animals.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial peptides; application; mechanism; structure-activity relationship
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30353555 DOI: 10.1002/med.21542
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Res Rev ISSN: 0198-6325 Impact factor: 12.944