Comparison of Cyclic and Linear Antimicrobial Peptides

ORAL

Abstract

The problem of world-wide bacterial resistance to conventional antibiotics motivates the study of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) as alternative antibiotics. Our work compares two linear forms of AMPs (LE-53 (12-mer) and LE-55 (16-mer)) with their cyclic versions (CE-03 and CE-05). These synthetic AMPs are designed de novo in the Deslouches lab at the University of Pittsburgh, where Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) and toxicity tests are performed. The Tristram-Nagle lab carries out circular dichroism (CD) to determine the AMP secondary structure, and X-ray diffuse scattering (XDS) to determine elastic properties, chain order and membrane structure. For bacterial killing activity, CE-03 is slightly more effective than LE-53, but CE-05 is dramatically more effective than LE-55. All four are non-toxic to both red and white blood cells. We find that none of these AMPs is alpha-helical, as they were designed not to be helical. Rather they all adopt random coil and beta-sheet structures in lipid model membranes (LMMs) mimicking Gram-postivie G(+) and Gram-negative G(-) membranes. For elastic properties, all four AMPs cause a slight softening (lowering of KC) with increasing concentration. For chain order, all four AMPs cause some chain disorder in G(+) and G(-) LMMs, but have a smaller disordering effect in Euk33 (eukaryotic) LMMs. Membrane thickness decreases for all four AMPs in G(+) and G(-) LMMs, but increases in Euk33 LMMs, suggesting that membrane thinning is associated with destabilization, and membrane thickening with stabilization (no toxicity). Small-angle x-ray scattering (SAXS) informs that all except LE-55 are fusogenic to G(+) and G(-) ULVs, but none is fusogenic to Euk33 ULVs. While all four AMPs locate in the headgroup region in G(+) and G(-) LMMs, they all locate in the hydrocarbon region in Euk33 LMMs. These biophysical studies give insights into the molecular mechanisms of antimicrobial activity.

*This work is based upon research conducted at the Center for High Energy X-ray Sciences (CHEXS at CHESS), which is supported by the National Science Foundation under award DMR-1829070, and the Macromolecular Diffraction at CHESS (MacCHESS) facility, which is supported by award 1-P30-GM124166-01A1 from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, National Institutes of Health, and by New York State's Empire State Development Corporation (NYSTAR). The authors would also like to acknowledge Dr. Stephen Paul Meisburger for his help at CHEXS (CHESS). Additional support for this work was from the National Science Foundation NSF MCB-2115790 (S.M., S.T-N.), National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) 1R01AI172861-01A1 (B.D., S.T-N.), MC and FS (SURF, CMU), JH (HURAY, CMU), GK (SURA, CMU), GT (HURAY, CMU), JO, KK, AL (SURA, CMU).

Publication: Cyclic antimicrobial peptides perform better (in preparation for ACS Infectious Diseases)

Presenters

  • Prof. Stephanie Tristram-Nagle

    • Carnegie Mellon University

Authors

  • Prof. Stephanie Tristram-Nagle

    • Carnegie Mellon University
  • Saheli Mitra

    • Carnegie Mellon University
  • Berthony Deslouches

    • University of Pittsburgh