Version 2 2016-08-24, 18:03Version 2 2016-08-24, 18:03
Version 1 2016-08-18, 18:25Version 1 2016-08-18, 18:25
journal contribution
posted on 2016-08-09, 00:00authored byHiroaki Ishida, Leonard T. Nguyen, Ramamourthy Gopal, Tomoyasu Aizawa, Hans J. Vogel
In recent years, the increasing number
of antibiotic-resistant
bacteria has become a serious health concern. Antimicrobial peptides
(AMPs) are an important component of the innate immune system of most
organisms. A better understanding of their structures and mechanisms
of action would lead to the design of more potent and safer AMPs as
alternatives for current antibiotics. For detailed investigations,
effective recombinant production which allows the facile modification
of the amino acid sequence, the introduction of unnatural amino acids,
and labeling with stable isotopes for nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)
studies is desired. Several expression strategies have been introduced
in previous reports; however, their effectiveness has been limited
to a select few AMPs. Here, we have studied calmodulin (CaM) as a
more universal carrier protein to express many types of AMPs in E. coli. We have discovered that the unique architecture
of CaM, consisting of two independent target binding domains with
malleable methionine-rich interaction surfaces, can accommodate numerous
amino acid sequences containing basic and hydrophobic residues. This
effectively masks the toxic antimicrobial activities of many amphipathic
AMPs and protects them from degradation during expression and purification.
Here, we demonstrate the expression of various AMPs using a CaM-fusion
expression system, including melittin, fowlicidin-1, tritrpticin,
indolicidin, puroindoline A peptide, magainin II F5W, lactoferrampin
B, MIP3α51–70, and human β-defensin
3 (HBD-3), the latter requiring three disulfide bonds for proper folding.
In addition, our approach was extended to the transmembrane domain
of the cell adhesion protein l-selectin. We propose the use
of the CaM-fusion system as a universal approach to express many cationic
amphipathic peptides that are normally toxic and would kill the bacterial
host cells.