Structural and Antimicrobial Features of Peptides
Related to Myticin C, a Special Defense Molecule from the Mediterranean
Mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis
posted on 2015-10-28, 00:00authored byStefania Domeneghetti, Marco Franzoi, Nunzio Damiano, Rosa Norante, Nancy M. El Halfawy, Stefano Mammi, Oriano Marin, Massimo Bellanda, Paola Venier
Mussels (Mytilus spp.) have a large
repertoire of cysteine-stabilized α,β peptides, and myticin
C (MytC) was identified in some hundreds of transcript variants after
in vivo immunostimulation. Using a sequence expressed in Italian mussels,
we computed the MytC structure and synthesized the mature MytC and
related peptide fragments (some of them also prepared in oxidized
form) to accurately assess their antibacterial and antifungal activity.
Only when tested at pH 5 was the reduced MytC as well as reduced and
oxidized fragments including structural β-elements able to inhibit
Gram-positive and -negative bacteria (MIC ranges of 4–32 and
8–32 μM, respectively). Such fragments caused selective Escherichia coli killing (MBC of 8–32 μM)
but scarcely inhibited two fungal strains. In detail, the antimicrobial
β-hairpin MytC[19–40]SOX caused membrane-disrupting
effects in E. coli despite its partially ordered
conformation in membrane-mimetic environments. In perspective, MytC-derived
peptides could be employed to protect acidic mucosal tissues, in cosmetic
and food products, and, possibly, as adjuvants in aquaculture.