posted on 2016-03-31, 00:00authored byFengyu She, Alekhya Nimmagadda, Peng Teng, Ma Su, Xiaobing Zuo, Jianfeng Cai
As
one of the greatest threats facing the 21st century, antibiotic
resistance is now a major public health concern. Host-defense peptides
(HDPs) offer an alternative approach to combat emerging multi-drug-resistant
bacteria. It is known that helical HDPs such as magainin 2 and its
analogs adopt cationic amphipathic conformations upon interaction
with bacterial membranes, leading to membrane disruption and subsequent
bacterial cell death. We have previously shown that amphipathic sulfono-γ-AApeptides
could mimic magainin 2 and exhibit bactericidal activity. In this
article, we demonstrate for the first time that amphipathic helical
1:1 α/sulfono-γ-AA heterogeneous peptides, in which regular
amino acids and sulfono-γ-AApeptide building blocks are alternatively
present in a 1:1 pattern, display potent antibacterial activity against
both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacterial pathogens. Small angle
X-ray scattering (SAXS) suggests that the lead sequences adopt defined
helical structures. The subsequent studies including fluorescence
microscopy and time-kill experiments indicate that these hybrid peptides
exert antimicrobial activity by mimicking the mechanism of HDPs. Our
findings may lead to the development of HDP-mimicking antimicrobial
peptidomimetics that combat drug-resistant bacterial pathogens. In
addition, our results also demonstrate the effective design of a new
class of helical foldamer, which could be employed to interrogate
other important biological targets such as protein–protein
interactions in the future.