Publication | Closed Access
Analogous oligo‐acyl‐lysines with distinct antibacterial mechanisms
66
Citations
41
References
2008
Year
Analogous Oligo‐acyl‐lysinesHost Defense PeptidesBiochemistryAntibioticsNatural SciencesPeptide LibraryPeptide EngineeringPeptide SynthesisProtein EngineeringHexamer AnalogMicrobiologyAntibacterial MechanismsCharge BuildupChemical BiologyMedicineAntibacterial AgentAntimicrobial CompoundAntimicrobial Resistance
Bactericidal properties were recently shown to emerge from hydrophobicity and charge buildup in oligo-acyl-lysine (OAK) peptide mimetics. Toward understanding the attributes that govern the activity of this novel antimicrobial system, we compared the functional and mechanistic properties of a known octamer and a newly generated hexamer analog. The data provide strong evidence for multiple similarities that included high tissue stability, low hemolysis, large-spectrum antibacterial activity in vitro, and the ability to prevent Escherichia coli-induced mortality in vivo. Despite these similarities, however, the octamer mode of action involved membrane disruption, unlike the hexamer, which acted predominantly through inhibition of DNA functions with characteristically slower bactericidal kinetics. Collectively, the data support the view that the analogous OAKs induced bacterial death by distinct mechanisms and further suggest that relatively minor differences in the sequence of host defense peptides are responsible for selecting one mechanism over another, possibly in conjunction with differential binding affinities to the external and/or cytoplasmic membrane.
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