Open Access
The Central Kink Region of Fowlicidin-2, an α-Helical Host Defense Peptide, Is Critically Involved in Bacterial Killing and Endotoxin Neutralization
Author(s) -
Yanjing Xiao,
Alvaro I. Herrera,
Yugendar R. Bommineni,
José L. Soulages,
Om Prakash,
Guolong Zhang
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of innate immunity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.078
H-Index - 64
eISSN - 1662-8128
pISSN - 1662-811X
DOI - 10.1159/000174822
Subject(s) - cathelicidin , peptide , lipopolysaccharide , circular dichroism , peptide sequence , biology , neutralization , amino acid , innate immune system , biochemistry , stereochemistry , antimicrobial peptides , chemistry , antibody , immunology , gene , receptor
Fowlicidins are a group of newly identified chicken cathelicidin host defense peptides. We have shown that the putatively mature fowlicidin-2 of 31 amino acid residues possesses potent antibacterial and lipopolysaccharide (LPS)- neutralizing activities, but with a noticeable toxicity to mammalian cells. As a first step in exploring the structure-activity relationships of fowlicidin-2, in this study we determined its tertiary structure by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Unlike the majority of cathelicidins, which are composed of a predominant alpha-helix with a short hinge sequence near the center, fowlicidin-2 consists of 2 well-defined alpha-helical segments (residues 6-12 and 23-27) connected by a long extensive kink (residues 13-20) induced by proline. To further investigate the functional significance of each of these structural components, several N- and C-terminal deletion analogs of fowlicidin-2 were synthesized and analyzed for their antibacterial, cytotoxic and LPS-neutralizing activities. Our results indicated that neither the N- nor C-terminal alpha-helix alone is sufficient to confer any function. Rather, fowlicidin-2(1-18) and fowlicidin-2(15-31), 2 alpha-helical segments with inclusion of the central cationic kink region, retained substantial capacities to kill bacteria and neutralize the LPS-induced proinflammatory response, relative to the parent peptide. More desirably, these 2 peptide analogs showed substantially reduced toxicity to human erythrocytes and epithelial cells, indicative of improved potential as antibacterial and antisepsis agents. To our knowledge, fowlicidin-2 is the first alpha-helical cathelicidin, with the central kink region shown to be critically important in killing bacteria and neutralizing LPS.