首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


Antimicrobial α-defensins as multi-target inhibitors against amyloid formation and microbial infection
Authors:Yanxian Zhang  Yonglan Liu  Yijing Tang  Dong Zhang  Huacheng He  Jiang Wu  Jie Zheng
Institution:Department of Chemical, Biomolecular, and Corrosion Engineering, The University of Akron, Ohio USA.; College of Chemistry and Materials Engineering, Wenzhou University, Zhejiang China ; School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Wenzhou Medical University, Zhejiang China
Abstract:Amyloid aggregation and microbial infection are considered as pathological risk factors for developing amyloid diseases, including Alzheimer''s disease (AD), type II diabetes (T2D), Parkinson''s disease (PD), and medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC). Due to the multifactorial nature of amyloid diseases, single-target drugs and treatments have mostly failed to inhibit amyloid aggregation and microbial infection simultaneously, thus leading to marginal benefits for amyloid inhibition and medical treatments. Herein, we proposed and demonstrated a new “anti-amyloid and antimicrobial hypothesis” to discover two host-defense antimicrobial peptides of α-defensins containing β-rich structures (human neutrophil peptide of HNP-1 and rabbit neutrophil peptide of NP-3A), which have demonstrated multi-target, sequence-independent functions to (i) prevent the aggregation and misfolding of different amyloid proteins of amyloid-β (Aβ, associated with AD), human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP, associated with T2D), and human calcitonin (hCT, associated with MTC) at sub-stoichiometric concentrations, (ii) reduce amyloid-induced cell toxicity, and (iii) retain their original antimicrobial activity upon the formation of complexes with amyloid peptides. Further structural analysis showed that the sequence-independent amyloid inhibition function of α-defensins mainly stems from their cross-interactions with amyloid proteins via β-structure interactions. The discovery of antimicrobial peptides containing β-structures to inhibit both microbial infection and amyloid aggregation greatly expands the new therapeutic potential of antimicrobial peptides as multi-target amyloid inhibitors for better understanding pathological causes and treatments of amyloid diseases.

We report a new “anti-amyloid and antimicrobial hypothesis” by discovering host-defense antimicrobial peptides of α-defensins containing β-sheet structures, which possess inhibition functions against amyloid aggregation and microbial infection.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号