AI Article Synopsis

  • The tertiary structures of theromacin and neuromacin confirm that the macin protein family is a distinct group of antimicrobial proteins within the scorpion toxin-like protein superfamily.
  • Neuromacin is more effective than theromacin and hydramacin-1 at damaging bacterial membranes and is uniquely able to form pores, making it particularly potent against Staphylococcus aureus.
  • Neuromacin and theromacin also promote nerve repair in leech cells, while all three macins enhance the survival of neuroblastoma cells, indicating their potential for both antimicrobial and neuroprotective functions.

Article Abstract

The tertiary structures of theromacin and neuromacin confirmed the macin protein family as a self-contained family of antimicrobial proteins within the superfamily of scorpion toxin-like proteins. The macins, which also comprise hydramacin-1, are antimicrobially active against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. Despite high sequence identity, the three proteins showed distinct differences with respect to their biological activity. Neuromacin exhibited a significantly stronger capacity to permeabilize the cytoplasmic membrane of Bacillus megaterium than theromacin and hydramacin-1. Accordingly, it is the only macin that displays pore-forming activity and that was potently active against Staphylococcus aureus. Moreover, neuromacin and hydramacin-1 led to an aggregation of bacterial cells that was not observed with theromacin. Analysis of the molecular surface properties of macins allowed confirmation of the barnacle model as the mechanistic model for the aggregation effect. Besides being antimicrobially active, neuromacin and theromacin, in contrast to hydramacin-1, were able to enhance the repair of leech nerves ex vivo. Notably, all three macins enhanced the viability of murine neuroblastoma cells, extending their functional characteristics. As neuromacin appears to be both a functional and structural chimera of hydramacin-1 and theromacin, the putative structural correlate responsible for the nerve repair capacity in leech was located to a cluster of six amino acid residues using the sequence similarity of surface-exposed regions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3340141PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M111.336495DOI Listing

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