Affiliation:
1. Institute of Physical Sciences, National Autonomous University of Mexico (ICF-UNAM). Avenida Universidad 2001,
Chamilpa, 62210, Cuernavaca, Morelos, México
Abstract
Abstract:
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are recognized for their potential application as new
generation antibiotics, however, up to date, they have not been widely commercialized as expected.
Although current bioinformatic tools can predict antimicrobial activity based on only amino
acid sequences with astounding accuracy, peptide selectivity and potency are not foreseeable.
This, in turn, creates a bottleneck not only in the discovery and isolation of promising candidates
but, most importantly, in the design and development of novel synthetic peptides. In this paper,
we discuss the challenges faced when trying to predict peptide selectivity and potency, based on
peptide sequence, structure and relevant biophysical properties such as length, net charge and hydrophobicity.
Here, pore-forming alpha-helical antimicrobial peptides family isolated from anurans
was used as the case study. Our findings revealed no congruent relationship between the predicted
peptide properties and reported microbial assay data, such as minimum inhibitory concentrations
against microorganisms and hemolysis. In many instances, the peptides with the best physicochemical
properties performed poorly against microbial strains. In some cases, the predicted properties
were so similar that differences in activity amongst peptides of the same family could not be
projected. Our general conclusion is that antimicrobial peptides of interest must be carefully examined
since there is no universal strategy for accurately predicting their behavior.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.