Liu, Li; Fang, Ying; Huang, Qingsheng; Wu, Jianhua
A Rigidity-Enhanced Antimicrobial Activity: A Case for Linear Cationic alpha-Helical Peptide HP(2-20) and Its Four Analogues
PLOS ONE, 6 Art. No. e16441, JAN 24 2011

Linear cationic a-helical antimicrobial peptides are referred to as one of the most likely substitutes for common antibiotics, due to their relatively simple structures (<= 40 residues) and various antimicrobial activities against a wide range of pathogens. Of those, HP(2-20) was isolated from Helicobacter pylori ribosomal protein. To reveal a mechanical determinant that may mediate the antimicrobial activities, we examined the mechanical properties and structural stabilities of HP(2-20) and its four analogues of same chain length by steered molecular dynamics simulation. The results indicated the following: the resistance of H-bonds to the tensile extension mediated the early extensive stage; with the loss of H-bonds, the tensile force was dispensed to prompt the conformational phase transition; and Young's moduli (N/m(2)) of the peptides were about 4 similar to 8 x 10(9). These mechanical features were sensitive to the variation of the residue compositions. Furthermore, we found that the antimicrobial activity is rigidity-enhanced, that is, a harder peptide has stronger antimicrobial activity. It suggests that the molecular spring constant may be used to seek a new structure-activity relationship for different a-helical peptide groups. This exciting result was reasonably explained by a possible mechanical mechanism that regulates both the membrane pore formation and the peptide insertion.

DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0016441

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