Title
Chemical synthesis, structure-activity relationship, and properties of shepherin I: A fungicidal peptide enriched in glycine-glycine-histidine motifs
Date Issued
01 January 2014
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Oewel T.
Daffre S.
Lopes T.
Dyszy F.
Schreier S.
Machado-Santelli G.
Teresa Machini M.
University of São Paulo
Publisher(s)
Springer-Verlag Wien
Abstract
Although glycine-rich antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are found in animals and plants, very little has been reported on their chemistry, structure activity-relationship, and properties. We investigated those topics for Shepherin I (Shep I), a glycine-rich AMP with the unique amino acid sequence G<sup>1</sup>YGGHGGHGGHGGHGGHGGHGHGGGGHG<sup>28</sup>. Shep I and analogues were synthesized by the solid-phase method at 60°C using conventional heating. Purification followed by chemical characterization confirmed the products' identities and high purity. Amino acid analysis provided their peptide contents. All peptides were active against the clinically important Candida species, but ineffective against bacteria and mycelia fungi. Truncation of the N- or C-terminal portion reduced Shep I antifungal activity, the latter being more pronounced. Carboxyamidation of Shep I did not affect the activity against C. albicans or C. tropicalis, but increased activity against S. cerevisiae. Carboxyamidated analogues Shep I (3-28)a and Shep I (6-28)a were equipotent to Shep I and Shep Ia against Candida species. As with most cationic AMPs, all peptides had their activity significantly reduced in high-salt concentrations, a disadvantage that is defeated if 10 μM ZnCl<inf>2</inf> is present. At 100 μM, the peptides were practically not hemolytic. Shep Ia also killed C. albicans MDM8 and ATCC 90028 cells. Fluo-Shep Ia, an analogue labeled with 5(6)-carboxyfluorescein, was rapidly internalized by C. albicans MDM8 cells, a salt-sensitive process dependent on metabolic energy and temperature. Altogether, such results shed light on the chemistry, structural requirements for activity, and other properties of candidacidal glycine-rich peptides. Furthermore, they show that Shep Ia may have strong potential for use in topical application.
Start page
2573
End page
2586
Volume
46
Issue
11
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Bioquímica, Biología molecular
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84933528404
PubMed ID
Source
Amino Acids
ISSN of the container
09394451
Sponsor(s)
This work was supported by FAPESP (grants 04/14376-7 and 08/11695-1 to MTM) and CNPq (142022/2003-9, a doctoral fellowship for CR). We thank Dr. Nilton Lincopan (for providing C. albicans ATCC 90028 and HU 168 strains), Dr. Cleber W. Liria (for amino acid analyses), Adriana Y. Matzukuma and Roberto C. Modia (for assistance with FACS and confocal microscopy, respectively), and Gustavo P.B. Carretero (for theoretical structure prediction).
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
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