Department of Chemical Science and Technologies, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy.
Adv Exp Med Biol. 2019;1117:175-214. doi: 10.1007/978-981-13-3588-4_11.
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) attack bacterial membranes selectively, killing microbes at concentrations that cause no toxicity to the host cells. This selectivity is not due to interaction with specific receptors but is determined by the different lipid compositions of the membranes of the two cell types and by the peculiar physicochemical properties of AMPs, particularly their cationic and amphipathic character. However, the available data, including recent studies of peptide-cell association, indicate that this picture is excessively simplistic, because selectivity is modulated by a complex interplay of several interconnected phenomena. For instance, conformational transitions and self-assembly equilibria modulate the effective peptide hydrophobicity, the electrostatic and hydrophobic contributions to the membrane-binding driving force are nonadditive, and kinetic processes can play an important role in selective bacterial killing in the presence of host cells. All these phenomena and their bearing on the final activity and toxicity of AMPs must be considered in the definition of design principles to optimize peptide selectivity.
抗菌肽 (AMPs) 选择性地攻击细菌膜,在不引起宿主细胞毒性的浓度下杀死微生物。这种选择性不是由于与特定受体的相互作用,而是由两种细胞类型的膜的不同脂质组成以及 AMPs 的特殊物理化学性质决定的,特别是它们的阳离子和两亲性。然而,现有数据,包括最近对肽-细胞相互作用的研究表明,这种情况过于简单化,因为选择性受到多种相互关联的现象的复杂相互作用的调节。例如,构象转变和自组装平衡调节有效肽疏水性,静电和疏水性对膜结合驱动力的贡献不是加和的,并且动力学过程在存在宿主细胞的情况下在选择性细菌杀伤中可以发挥重要作用。所有这些现象及其对 AMPs 最终活性和毒性的影响都必须在优化肽选择性的设计原则的定义中加以考虑。