PEGylation of antimicrobial peptides as a shielding tool that increases stability toward proteolytic degradation typically leads to concomitant loss of activity, whereas incorporation of ultrashort PEG-like amino acids (sPEGs) remains essentially unexplored. Here, modification of a peptide/β-peptoid hybrid with sPEGs was examined with respect to influence on hydrophobicity, antibacterial activity and effect on viability of mammalian cells for a set of 18 oligomers. Intriguingly, the degree of sPEG modification did not significantly affect hydrophobicity as measured by retention in reverse-phase HPLC. Antibacterial activity against both wild-type and drug-resistant strains of and (both Gram-negative pathogens) was retained or slightly improved (MICs in the range 2-16 µg/mL equal to 0.7-5.2 µM). All compounds in the series exhibited less than 10% hemolysis at 400 µg/mL. While the number of sPEG moieties appeared not to be clearly correlated with hemolytic activity, a trend toward slightly increased hemolytic activity was observed for analogues displaying the longest sPEGs. In contrast, within a subseries the viability of HepG2 liver cells was least affected by analogues displaying the longer sPEGs (with IC values of ~1280 µg/mL) as compared to most other analogues and the parent peptidomimetic (IC values in the range 330-800 µg/mL).
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8268887 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms22137041 | DOI Listing |
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