AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers are exploring antimicrobial peptides as a new type of antimicrobial agent, focusing on their structural features that affect their ability to kill bacteria.
  • A synthetic peptide analog called AamAP1-Lysine was developed by modifying the naturally occurring peptide from scorpion venom to improve its antibacterial properties, demonstrating strong activity against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria.
  • AamAP1-Lysine shows minimal toxicity to mammalian cells at effective concentrations, suggesting it could be a promising candidate for future antimicrobial drug development.

Article Abstract

There is great interest in the development of antimicrobial peptides as a potentially novel class of antimicrobial agents. Several structural determinants are responsible for the antimicrobial and cytolytic activity of antimicrobial peptides. In our study, a new synthetic peptide analog, AamAP1-Lysine from the naturally occurring scorpion venom antimicrobial peptide AamAP1, was designed by modifying the parent peptide in order to increase the positive charge and optimize other physico-chemical parameters involved in antimicrobial activity. AamAP1-Lysine displayed potent antibacterial activity against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. The minimum inhibitory concentration was in the range of 5 to 15 µM with a 10 fold increase in potency over the parent peptide. The hemolytic and antiproliferative activity of AamAP1-Lysine against eukaryotic mammalian cells was minimal at the concentration range needed to inhibit bacterial growth. The antibacterial mechanism analysis indicated that AamAP1-Lysine is probably inducing bacterial cell death through membrane damage and permeabilization determined by the release of β-galactosidase enzyme from peptide treated E. coli cells. DNA binding studies revealed that AamAP1-Lysine caused complete retardation of DNA migration and could display intracellular activities in addition to the membrane permeabilization mode of action reported earlier. In conclusion, AamAP1-Lysine could prove to be a potential candidate for antimicrobial drug development in future studies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4035766PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ph7050502DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers are exploring antimicrobial peptides as a new type of antimicrobial agent, focusing on their structural features that affect their ability to kill bacteria.
  • A synthetic peptide analog called AamAP1-Lysine was developed by modifying the naturally occurring peptide from scorpion venom to improve its antibacterial properties, demonstrating strong activity against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria.
  • AamAP1-Lysine shows minimal toxicity to mammalian cells at effective concentrations, suggesting it could be a promising candidate for future antimicrobial drug development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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