| Literature DB >> 34946998 |
Davier Gutierrez-Gongora1,2, Jennifer Geddes-McAlister1,3.
Abstract
Proteases are involved in a broad range of physiological processes, including host invasion by fungal pathogens, and enzymatic inhibition is a key molecular mechanism controlling proteolytic activity. Importantly, inhibitors from natural or synthetic sources have demonstrated applications in biochemistry, biotechnology, and biomedicine. However, the need to discover new reservoirs of these inhibitory molecules with improved efficacy and target range has been underscored by recent protease characterization related to infection and antimicrobial resistance. In this regard, naturally-sourced inhibitors show promise for application in diverse biological systems due to high stability at physiological conditions and low cytotoxicity. Moreover, natural sources (e.g., plants, invertebrates, and microbes) provide a large reservoir of undiscovered and/or uncharacterized bioactive molecules involved in host defense against predators and pathogens. In this Review, we highlight discoveries of protease inhibitors from environmental sources, propose new opportunities for assessment of antifungal activity, and discuss novel applications to combat biomedically-relevant fungal diseases with in vivo and clinical purpose.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial resistance; biomedical applications; fungal pathogens; natural compounds; protease inhibitors; proteases
Year: 2021 PMID: 34946998 PMCID: PMC8704869 DOI: 10.3390/jof7121016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Figure 1General targets of natural antifungal protease inhibitors: Protease inhibitors with extracellular targets produce nutrition or growth impairment by inhibition of nutrition related proteases [32,42,43,44]. Protease inhibitors with membrane cell targets cause disruption or pore formation leading to ion (e.g., Na+, K+, Ca2+ deregulation or leakage of cellular components [30,31]. Finally, protease inhibitors with intracellular targets inhibit mitochondria or nuclear proteases producing reactive oxygen species (ROS) or apoptosis [30,31]. Black lines correspond to antifungal compounds and red lines to molecules with similar antifungal or antibacterial effects.
Protease inhibitors derived from plants with antimicrobial activity.
| Source | Protease Inhibitor Designation (Source) | Enzymatic Family | MW (kDa) | Activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| IETI ( | Kunitz | 19.7 | Antifungal (Protease inhibition, membrane disruption and oxidative stress) | [ |
| ILTI ( | 20 | [ | |||
| ApTI (A, B, C) | Kunitz | 20 | Antifungal (Secreted protease inhibition and nutrition impairment) | [ | |
| API | Unknown | 49 | Antifungal and Antibacterial | [ | |
| Lupinine ( | Quinolizidine alkaloid | 0.17 | Anticryptococcal (secreted metallopeptidase inhibition) | [ | |
| Diosgenin ( | Steroidal sapogenin | 0.41 | |||
|
| Potide-G | Kunitz | 5.57 | Antibacterial and Antifungal (Secreted protease inhibition and nutrition impairment) | [ |
| PG-2 ( | Kunitz | 3.2 | Antibacterial and Antifungal | [ | |
| AFP-J ( | Kunitz | 13.5 | Antifungal | [ | |
|
| RflP-1 ( | Kunitz | 22.5 | Antibacterial and | [ |
|
| CLTI | Unknown | 54 | Anti-HIV-1 reverse transcriptase activity and Antifungal | [ |
|
| Abietic acid | Abietane diterpenoid | 0.3 | Anticryptococcal (secreted metallopeptidase inhibition) | [ |
MW: Molecular weight.
Protease inhibitors derived from invertebrates with antimicrobial activity.
| Source | Protease Inhibitor Designation (Source) | Family/Chemical Class | MW (kDa) | Activity (Mechanism of Action) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| MjSerp1 ( | Serpin | 46.3 | Antibacterial | [ |
| SWDPm2 ( | Type III crustin | 7.38 | [ | ||
| BmoSPI51 ( | Kunitz-type | 14 | Antifungal | [ | |
|
| Peptides | Unknown | Unknown | HIV protease inhibitor (Competitive inhibition) | [ |
MW: Molecular weight.
Protease inhibitors derived from bacteria with antimicrobial activity.
| Source | Protease Inhibitor Designation (Source) | Family/Chemical Class | MW (kDa) | Activity (Mechanism of Action) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Pepstatin A ( | Hexapeptide | 0.68 | Antifungal (Secreted protease inhibition) and HIV protease inhibitor | [ |
|
| ATBI | Heptapeptide | 1.1 | HIV-1 protease inhibitor (Competitive inhibition) | [ |
MW: Molecular weight.