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Peptide lipidation and shortening optimises antibacterial, antibiofilm and membranolytic actions of an amphiphilic polylysine-polyphenyalanine octapeptide

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Mendes, B., Edwards-Gayle, C. and Barrett, G. orcid id iconORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1509-0179 (2024) Peptide lipidation and shortening optimises antibacterial, antibiofilm and membranolytic actions of an amphiphilic polylysine-polyphenyalanine octapeptide. Current Research in Biotechnology, 8. 100240. ISSN 2590-2628 doi: 10.1016/j.crbiot.2024.100240

Abstract/Summary

The demand for broad-spectrum antibacterial agents continues with increasing rates of resistance of microbial pathogens to traditional antibiotics. Peptides and lipopeptides are gaining traction as promising novel, class-reference antibiotics for tackling difficult-to-treat infections caused by multi-drug resistant bacteria. To identify novel candidates and expand treatment options in clinical settings, we explored the in vitro antibacterial potential and mode of action of a short octapeptide combining a cationic block of four lysines and a highly hydrophobic segment of four phenylalanines (K4F4), and two K4F4-inspired lipopeptides (Palmitoyl-K4F4 and K4-NH-Palmitoyl). Preliminary AI-based screening had revealed the antimicrobial potential of the K4F4 peptide coupled with limited haemolytic activity. Broth dilution and haemolytic assays have confirmed these in silico predictions. Overall, our lipidated peptides were more active at lower MIC values compared to non-lipidated species, indicating the beneficial impact of tailing lipidation on design of peptide-based antimicrobials. An integrated view of the membrane-active mechanism of these novel therapeutic templates was obtained using a combination of flow cytometry, fluorescence microscopy and dye-based permeabilization assays. K4F4 and its lipidated derivatives act via a fast-disrupting mechanism without inducing bacterial resistance mechanisms in a long-term exposure assay. A K4F4-inspired lipopeptide together with its shorter version (K4-NH-Palmitoyl), were more stable in environments closer emulating physiological conditions, showing a higher antibacterial response in physiological salts and serum than their parent peptide. Our findings reveal the antibacterial and antibiofilm potential of a novel polylysine-polyphenyalanine peptide and highlight the significant contribution of lipidation and shortening as molecular engineering strategies to improve and guide the future design of next-generation membrane-targeting antibiotics.

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Item Type Article
URI https://reading-clone.eprints-hosting.org/id/eprint/117461
Item Type Article
Refereed Yes
Divisions Life Sciences > School of Biological Sciences > Biomedical Sciences
Life Sciences > School of Biological Sciences > Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Publisher Elsevier
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