Zasloff M
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1987 Aug;84(15):5449-53. doi: 10.1073/pnas.84.15.5449.
A family of peptides with broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity has been isolated from the skin of the African clawed frog Xenopus laevis. It consists of two closely related peptides that are each 23 amino acids and differ by two substitutions. These peptides are water soluble, nonhemolytic at their effective antimicrobial concentrations, and potentially amphiphilic. At low concentrations they inhibit growth of numerous species of bacteria and fungi and induce osmotic lysis of protozoa. The sequence of a partial cDNA of the precursor reveals that both peptides derive from a common larger protein. These peptides appear to represent a previously unrecognized class of vertebrate antimicrobial activities.
从非洲爪蟾非洲爪蟾的皮肤中分离出了一类具有广谱抗菌活性的肽。它由两种密切相关的肽组成,每种肽有23个氨基酸,且有两个替换氨基酸的差异。这些肽是水溶性的,在其有效的抗菌浓度下无溶血作用,并且可能具有两亲性。在低浓度下,它们能抑制多种细菌和真菌的生长,并诱导原生动物的渗透裂解。前体部分cDNA的序列显示,这两种肽都来源于一种共同的更大的蛋白质。这些肽似乎代表了一类以前未被认识的脊椎动物抗菌活性。