Bacterial killing mechanism of sheep myeloid antimicrobial peptide-18 (SMAP-18) and its Trp-substituted analog with improved cell selectivity and reduced mammalian cell toxicity

  • Binu Jacob
  • , Yangmee Kim
  • , Jae Kyung Hyun
  • , Il Seon Park
  • , Jeong Kyu Bang
  • , Song Yub Shin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

23 Scopus citations

Abstract

To develop short antimicrobial peptide with improved cell selectivity and reduced mammalian cell toxicity compared to sheep myeloid antimicrobial peptide-29 (SMAP-29) and elucidate the possible mechanisms responsible for their antimicrobial action, we synthesized a N-terminal 18-residue peptide amide (SMAP-18) from SMAP-29 and its Trp-substituted analog (SMAP-18-W). Due to their reduced hemolytic activity and retained antimicrobial activity, SMAP-18 and SMAP-18-W showed higher cell selectivity than SMAP-29. In addition, SMAP-18 and SMAP-18-W had no cytotoxicity against three different mammalian cells such as RAW 264.7, NIH-3T3 and HeLa cells even at 100 μM. These results suggest that SMAP-18 and SMAP-18-W have potential for future development as novel therapeutic antimicrobial agent. Unlike SMAP-29, SMAP-18 and SMAP-18-W showed relatively weak ability to induce dye leakage from bacterial membrane-mimicking liposomes, N-phenyl-1-napthylamine (NPN) uptake and o-nitrophenyl-β-galactoside (ONPG) hydrolysis. Similar to SMAP-29, SMAP-18-W led to a significant membrane depolarization (>80 %) against Staphylococcus aureus at 2 × MIC. In contrast, SMAP-18 did not cause any membrane depolarization even at 4 × MIC. In confocal laser scanning microscopy, we observed translocation of SMAP-18 across the membrane in a non-membrane disruptive manner. SMAP-29 and SMAP-18-W were unable to translocate the bacterial membrane. Collectively, we propose here that SMAP-29 and SMAP-18-W kill microorganisms by disrupting/perturbing the lipid bilayer and forming pore/ion channels on bacterial cell membranes, respectively. In contrast, SMAP-18 may kill bacteria via intracellular-targeting mechanism.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)187-198
Number of pages12
JournalAmino Acids
Volume46
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2014
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Bacterial killing mechanism
  • Cell selectivity
  • Mammalian cell toxicity
  • SMAP-18
  • Trp-substituted SMAP-18 analog

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