1. Dermaseptin S9, an alpha-helical antimicrobial peptide with a hydrophobic core and cationic termini
Olivier Lequin, Ali Ladram, Ludovic Chabbert, Francine Bruston, Odile Convert, Damien Vanhoye, Gérard Chassaing, Pierre Nicolas, Mohamed Amiche Biochemistry. 2006 Jan 17;45(2):468-80. doi: 10.1021/bi051711i.
The dermaseptins S are closely related peptides with broad-spectrum antibacterial activity that are produced by the skin of the South American hylid frog, Phyllomedusa sauvagei. These peptides are polycationic (Lys-rich), alpha-helical, and amphipathic, with their polar/charged and apolar amino acids on opposing faces along the long axis of the helix cylinder. The amphipathic alpha-helical structure is believed to enable the peptides to interact with membrane bilayers, leading to permeation and disruption of the target cell. We have identified new members of the dermaseptin S family that do not resemble any of the naturally occurring antimicrobial peptides characterized to date. One of these peptides, designated dermaseptin S9, GLRSKIWLWVLLMIWQESNKFKKM, has a tripartite structure that includes a hydrophobic core sequence encompassing residues 6-15 (mean hydrophobicity, +4.40, determined by the Liu-Deber scale) flanked at both termini by cationic and polar residues. This structure is reminiscent of that of synthetic peptides originally designed as transmembrane mimetic models and that spontaneously become inserted into membranes [Liu, L., and Deber, C. M. (1998) Biopolymers 47, 41-62]. Dermaseptin S9 is a potent antibacterial, acting on gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. The structure of dermaseptin S9 in aqueous solution and in TFE/water mixtures was analyzed by circular dichroism and two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy combined with molecular dynamics calculations. Dermaseptin S9 is aggregated in water, but a monomeric nonamphipathic alpha-helical conformation, mostly in residues 6-21, is stabilized by the addition of TFE. These results, combined with membrane permeabilization assays and surface plasmon resonance analysis of the peptide binding to zwitterionic and anionic phospholipid bilayers, demonstrate that spatial segregation of hydrophobic and hydrophilic/charged residues on opposing faces along the long axis of a helix is not essential for the antimicrobial activity of cationic alpha-helical peptides.
2. Dermaseptin DA4, although closely related to dermaseptin B2, presents chemotactic and Gram-negative selective bactericidal activities
Constance Auvynet, Pierre Joanne, Julie Bourdais, Pierre Nicolas, Claire Lacombe, Yvonne Rosenstein FEBS J. 2009 Nov;276(22):6773-86. doi: 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2009.07392.x. Epub 2009 Oct 16.
Antimicrobial peptides participate in innate host defense by directly eliminating pathogens as a result of their ability to damage the microbial membrane and by providing danger signals that will recruit innate immune cells to the site of infection. Dermaseptin DA4 (DRS-DA4), a new antimicrobial peptide of the dermaseptin superfamily, was identified based on its chemotactic properties, contrasting with the currently used microbicidal properties assessment. The peptide was isolated and purified by size exclusion HPLC and RP-HPLC from the skin of the Mexican frog, Pachymedusa dacnicolor. MS and amino acid sequence analyses were consistent with the structure GMWSKIKNAGKAAKAAAKAAGKAALGAVSEAM. CD experiments showed that, unlike most antimicrobial peptides of the dermaseptin superfamily, DRS-DA4 is not structured in the presence of zwitterionic lipids. DRS-DA4 is a potent chemoattractant for human leukocytes and is devoid of hemolytic activity; in addition, bactericidal tests and membrane perturbation assays on model membranes and on Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus strains have shown that the antibacterial effects of DRS-DA4 and permeabilization of the inner membrane are exclusively selective for Gram-negative bacteria. Interestingly, despite high sequence homology with dermaseptin S4, dermaseptin B2 was not able to induce directional migration of leukocytes, and displayed a broader bactericidal spectrum. A detailed structure-function analysis of closely related peptides with different capabilities, such as DRS-DA4 and dermaseptin B2, is critical for the design of new molecules with specific attributes to modulate immunity and/or act as microbicidal agents.
3. Mechanism of antibacterial action of dermaseptin B2: interplay between helix-hinge-helix structure and membrane curvature strain
Cécile Galanth, Feten Abbassi, Olivier Lequin, Jésus Ayala-Sanmartin, Ali Ladram, Pierre Nicolas, Mohamed Amiche Biochemistry. 2009 Jan 20;48(2):313-27. doi: 10.1021/bi802025a.
Dermaseptin B2 (Drs B2) is a 33-residue-long cationic, alpha-helical antimicrobial peptide endowed with membrane-damaging activity against a broad spectrum of microorganisms, including bacteria, yeasts, fungi, and protozoa, but its precise mechanism of action remained ill-defined. A detailed characterization of peptide-membrane interactions of Drs B2 was undertaken in comparison with a C-terminal truncated analogue, [1-23]-Drs B2, that was virtually inactive on bacteria despite retaining the cationic charge of the full-length peptide. Both peptides were tested on living cells using membrane permeabilization assays and on large unilamellar and multilamellar phospholipid vesicles composed of binary lipid mixtures by dye leakage assay, fluorescence spectroscopy, circular dichroism, and differential scanning calorimetry and also on SDS micelles using NMR spectroscopy. The results indicate that Drs B2 induces a strong perturbation of anionic lipid bilayers, resides at the hydrocarbon core-water interface, parallel to the plane of the membrane, and interacts preferentially with the polar head groups and glycerol backbone region of the anionic phospholipids, as well as the region of the lipid acyl chain near the bilayer surface. The interfacial location of Drs B2 induces a positive curvature of the bilayer and clustering of anionic lipids, consistent with a carpet mechanism, that may lead to the formation of mixed peptide-phospholipid toroidal, transient pores and membrane permeation/disruption once a threshold peptide accumulation is reached. In constrast, the truncated [1-23]-Drs B2 analogue interacts at the head group level without penetrating and perturbing the hydrophobic core of the bilayer. NMR study in SDS micelles showed that [1-23]-Drs B2 adopts a well-defined helix encompassing residues 2-20, whereas Drs B2 was previously found to adopt helical structures interrupted around the Val(9)-Gly(10) segment. Thus the antibacterial activity of Drs B2 depends markedly on a threshold number of hydrophobic residues to be present on both extremities of the helix. In a membrane environment with a strong positive curvature strain, Drs B2 can adopt a flexible helix-hinge-helix structure that facilitates the concomitant insertion of the strongly hydrophobic N- and C-termini of the peptide into the acyl core of the membrane.