Publication | Open Access
Structure, Synthesis, and Molecular Cloning of Dermaseptins B, a Family of Skin Peptide Antibiotics
108
Citations
34
References
1998
Year
Molecular BiologyDermatologyChemical BiologyDrug ResistanceDermaseptins BSkin Peptide AntibioticsSkin SecretionsProteomicsAntimicrobial ResistanceBiochemistryDermaseptins B1Frog SpeciesMolecular CloningPharmacologySignal TransductionNatural SciencesPeptide LibraryNeuropeptide ReceptorPeptide TherapeuticPeptide SynthesisMedicineDrug DiscoveryNeuropeptides
Analysis of antimicrobial activities that are present in the skin secretions of the South American frog Phyllomedusa bicolor revealed six polycationic (lysine-rich) and amphipathic alpha-helical peptides, 24-33 residues long, termed dermaseptins B1 to B6, respectively. Prepro-dermaseptins B all contain an almost identical signal peptide, which is followed by a conserved acidic propiece, a processing signal Lys-Arg, and a dermaseptin progenitor sequence. The 22-residue signal peptide plus the first 3 residues of the acidic propiece are encoded by conserved nucleotides encompassed by the first coding exon of the dermaseptin genes. The 25-residue amino-terminal region of prepro-dermaseptins B shares 50% identity with the corresponding region of precursors for D-amino acid containing opioid peptides or for antimicrobial peptides originating from the skin of distantly related frog species. The remarkable similarity found between prepro-proteins that encode end products with strikingly different sequences, conformations, biological activities and modes of action suggests that the corresponding genes have evolved through dissemination of a conserved "secretory cassette" exon.
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