Affiliation:
1. Materials Science and Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY 12180, United States
Abstract
The rising incidence of antibiotic-resistant infections, combined with a declining number of new antibiotic
drug approvals, has generated an alarming therapeutic gap that critically undermines public health. Host
Defense Peptides (HDPs), sometimes referred to as “Nature’s Antibiotics”, are short chain, amphiphilic and cationic
peptide sequences found in all multicellular organisms as part of their innate immunity. While there is a vast
diversity in terms of HDP sequence and secondary structure, they all seem to share physiochemical characteristics
that can be appropriated for macromolecular design by the synthetic polymer chemist. Over the past decade,
remarkable progress has been made in the design and synthesis of polymer-based materials that effectively mimic
HDP action – broad-spectrum antibacterial potency, rapid bactericidal kinetics, and minimal toxicity to human
cells – while offering the additional benefits of low cost, high scalability, and lower propensity to induce resistance,
relative to their peptide-based counterparts. A broad range of different macromolecular structures and
architectures have been explored in this design space, including polynorbornenes, poly(meth)acrylates,
poly(meth)acrylamides, nylon-2 polymers, and polycarbonates, to name a just few. Across all of these diverse
chemical categories, the key determinants of antibacterial and hemolytic activity are the same as in HDPs: net
cationic charge at neutral pH, well-balanced facial amphiphilicity, and the molecular weight of the compounds. In
this review, we focus in particular on recent progress in the polymethacrylate category first pioneered by Kuroda
and DeGrado and later modified, expanded upon and rigorously optimized by Kuroda’s and many other groups.
Key findings and future challenges will be highlighted.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Drug Discovery,Pharmacology
Cited by
29 articles.
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