1hu6
From Proteopedia
SOLUTION STRUCTURE OF G10 NOVISPIRIN
Structural highlights
Publication Abstract from PubMedWe studied three model antibacterial peptides that resembled the N-terminal 18 amino acids of SMAP-29, an alpha-helical, antimicrobial peptide of sheep. Although the parent compound, ovispirin-1 (KNLRR IIRKI IHIIK KYG), was potently antimicrobial, it was also highly cytotoxic to human epithelial cells and hemolytic for human erythrocytes. Single residue substitutions to ovispirin-1 yielded two substantially less cytotoxic peptides (novispirins), with intact antimicrobial properties. One of these, novispirin G-10, differed from ovispirin-1 only by containing glycine at position 10, instead of isoleucine. The other, novispirin T-7, contained threonine instead of isoleucine at position 7. We determined the three-dimensional solution structures of all three peptides by circular dichroism spectroscopy and two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Although all retained an amphipathic helical structure in 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol, they manifested subtle fine-structural changes that evidently impacted their activities greatly. These findings show that simple structural modifications can 'fine-tune' an antimicrobial peptide to minimize unwanted cytotoxicity while retaining its desired activity. Impact of single-residue mutations on the structure and function of ovispirin/novispirin antimicrobial peptides.,Sawai MV, Waring AJ, Kearney WR, McCray PB Jr, Forsyth WR, Lehrer RI, Tack BF Protein Eng. 2002 Mar;15(3):225-32. PMID:11932493[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
|
Categories: Large Structures | Forsyth WR | Kearney WR | Lehrer RI | McCray Jr PB | Sawai MV | Tack BF | Waring AJ