Author:
Cardoso Marlon H.,Ribeiro Suzana M.,Nolasco Diego O.,de la Fuente-Núñez César,Felício Mário R.,Gonçalves Sónia,Matos Carolina O.,Liao Luciano M.,Santos Nuno C.,Hancock Robert E. W.,Franco Octávio L.,Migliolo Ludovico
Abstract
Abstract
Due to the growing concern about antibiotic-resistant microbial infections, increasing support has been given to new drug discovery programs. A promising alternative to counter bacterial infections includes the antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), which have emerged as model molecules for rational design strategies. Here we focused on the study of Pa-MAP 1.9, a rationally designed AMP derived from the polar fish Pleuronectes americanus. Pa-MAP 1.9 was active against Gram-negative planktonic bacteria and biofilms, without being cytotoxic to mammalian cells. By using AFM, leakage assays, CD spectroscopy and in silico tools, we found that Pa-MAP 1.9 may be acting both on intracellular targets and on the bacterial surface, also being more efficient at interacting with anionic LUVs mimicking Gram-negative bacterial surface, where this peptide adopts α-helical conformations, than cholesterol-enriched LUVs mimicking mammalian cells. Thus, as bacteria present varied physiological features that favor antibiotic-resistance, Pa-MAP 1.9 could be a promising candidate in the development of tools against infections caused by pathogenic bacteria.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
53 articles.
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