Issue 1, 2019

Self-assembly dynamics and antimicrobial activity of all l- and d-amino acid enantiomers of a designer peptide

Abstract

Recent studies have shown that antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) can self-assemble into supramolecular structures, but this has been overlooked as causative of their antimicrobial activity. Also, the higher antimicrobial potency of D-enantiomers compared to L-enantiomers of AMPs cannot always be attributed to their different resistance to protease degradation. Here, we tested all L- and D-amino acid versions of GL13K, an AMP derived from a human protein, to study structural links between the AMP secondary structure, supramolecular self-assembly dynamics, and antimicrobial activity. pH dependence and the evolution of secondary structures were related to a self-assembly process with differences among these AMPs. The two GL13K enantiomers formed analogous self-assembled twisted nanoribbon structures, but D-GL13K initiated self-assembly faster and had notably higher antimicrobial potency than L-GL13K. A non-antimicrobial scrambled amino acid version of L-GL13K assembled at a much higher pH to form distinctively different self-assembled structures than L-GL13K. Our results support a functional relationship between the AMP self-assembly and their antimicrobial activity.

Graphical abstract: Self-assembly dynamics and antimicrobial activity of all l- and d-amino acid enantiomers of a designer peptide

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Sep 2018
Accepted
20 Nov 2018
First published
21 Nov 2018

Nanoscale, 2019,11, 266-275

Self-assembly dynamics and antimicrobial activity of all L- and D-amino acid enantiomers of a designer peptide

Z. Ye, X. Zhu, S. Acosta, D. Kumar, T. Sang and C. Aparicio, Nanoscale, 2019, 11, 266 DOI: 10.1039/C8NR07334A

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