Panurgines, Novel Antimicrobial Peptides from the Venom of Communal
Bee Panurgus calcaratus
Amino Acids, 2013 Jul;45(1):143-57
Three novel antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), named panurgines
(PNGs), were isolated from the venom of the wild bee Panurgus calcaratus. The
dodecapeptide of the sequence LNWGAILKHIIK-NH2 (PNG-1) belongs to the category
of α-helical amphipathic AMPs. The other two cyclic peptides containing 25
amino acid residues and two intramolecular disulfide bridges of the pattern
Cys8-Cys23 and Cys11-Cys19 have almost identical sequence established as
LDVKKIICVACKIXPNPACKKICPK-OH (X=K, PNG-K and X=R, PNG-R). All three peptides
exhibited antimicrobial activity against Gram-positive bacteria and
Gram-negative bacteria, antifungal activity, and low hemolytic activity against
human erythrocytes.
We prepared a series of PNG-1 analogs to study the effects
of cationicity, amphipathicity, and hydrophobicity on the biological activity.
Several of them exhibited improved antimicrobial potency, particularly those
with increased net positive charge. The linear analogs of PNG-K and PNG-R
having all Cys residues substituted by α-amino butyric acid were inactive, thus
indicating the importance of disulfide bridges for the antimicrobial activity.
However, the linear PNG-K with all four cysteine residues unpaired, exhibited
antimicrobial activity. PNG-1 and its analogs induced a significant leakage of
fluorescent dye entrapped in bacterial membrane-mimicking large unilamellar
vesicles as well as in vesicles mimicking eukaryotic cell membrane. On the
other hand, PNG-K and PNG-R exhibited dye-leakage activity only from vesicles
mimicking bacterial cell membrane.
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