AI Article Synopsis

  • Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have significant potential for treating respiratory infections, and pegylation can enhance their safety and effectiveness.
  • PEG-CaLL, a modified version of the potent AMP CaLL, shows less lung toxicity while retaining strong antimicrobial activity against bacterial pathogens in the lungs.
  • Studies demonstrated that pegylation reduces cell toxicity and maintains membrane binding characteristics, making it a promising option for localized lung therapies without compromising effectiveness.

Article Abstract

Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have therapeutic potential, particularly for localized infections such as those of the lung. Here we show that airway administration of a pegylated AMP minimizes lung tissue toxicity while nevertheless maintaining antimicrobial activity. CaLL, a potent synthetic AMP (KWKLFKKIFKRIVQRIKDFLR) comprising fragments of LL-37 and cecropin A peptides, was N-terminally pegylated (PEG-CaLL). PEG-CaLL derivatives retained significant antimicrobial activity (50% inhibitory concentrations [IC(50)s] 2- to 3-fold higher than those of CaLL) against bacterial lung pathogens even in the presence of lung lining fluid. Circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy confirmed that conformational changes associated with the binding of CaLL to model microbial membranes were not disrupted by pegylation. Pegylation of CaLL reduced AMP-elicited cell toxicity as measured using in vitro lung epithelial primary cell cultures. Further, in a fully intact ex vivo isolated perfused rat lung (IPRL) model, airway-administered PEG-CaLL did not result in disruption of the pulmonary epithelial barrier, whereas CaLL caused an immediate loss of membrane integrity leading to pulmonary edema. All AMPs (CaLL, PEG-CaLL, LL-37, cecropin A) delivered to the lung by airway administration showed limited (<3%) pulmonary absorption in the IPRL with extensive AMP accumulation in lung tissue itself, a characteristic anticipated to be beneficial for the treatment of pulmonary infections. We conclude that pegylation may present a means of improving the lung biocompatibility of AMPs designed for the treatment of pulmonary infections.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3370748PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AAC.06335-11DOI Listing

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