Antimicrobial activity of snake β-defensins and derived peptides


Tipo de documento
Article
Idioma
English
Direitos de acesso
Open access
Licença de uso
CC BY
Aparece nas Coleções:
Métricas
Resumo em inglês
β-defensins are antimicrobial peptides presenting in vertebrate animals. They participate in innate immunity, but little is known about them in reptiles, including snakes. Although several β-defensin genes were described in Brazilian snakes, their function is still unknown. The peptide sequence from these genes was deduced, and synthetic peptides (with approximately 40 amino acids and derived peptides) were tested against pathogenic bacteria and fungi using microbroth dilution assays. The linear peptides, derived from β-defensins, were designed applying the bioisosterism strategy. The linear β-defensins were more active against Escherichia coli, Micrococcus luteus, Citrobacter freundii, and Staphylococcus aureus. The derived peptides (7–14 mer) showed antibacterial activity against those bacteria and on Klebsiella pneumoniae. Nonetheless, they did not present activity against Candida albicans, Cryptococcus neoformans, Trychophyton rubrum, and Aspergillus fumigatus showing that the cysteine substitution to serine is deleterious to antifungal properties. Tryptophan residue showed to be necessary to improve antibacterial activity. Even though the studied snake β-defensins do not have high antimicrobial activity, they proved to be attractive as template molecules for the development of antibiotics.
Referência
Oguiura N, Corrêa PG, Rosmino IL, Souza AO, Pasqualoto KFM. Antimicrobial activity of snake β-defensins and derived peptides. Toxins. 2021 Dec;14(1):1. doi:10.3390/toxins14010001.
URL permanente para citação desta referência
https://repositorio.butantan.gov.br/handle/butantan/4101
Sobre o periódico
Data de publicação
2022


Arquivos neste item

toxins-14-00001-v2.pdf
Descrição:
Tamanho: 871.21 kB
Formato: Adobe PDF
Ver/Aberto
Mostrar todos os metadados

Este item está licenciada sob uma Licença Creative Commons Creative Commons