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Journal ArticleDOI

Antimicrobial peptides: pore formers or metabolic inhibitors in bacteria?

Kim A. Brogden
- 01 Mar 2005 - 
- Vol. 3, Iss: 3, pp 238-250
TLDR
In this review the different models of antimicrobial-peptide-induced pore formation and cell killing are presented and several observations suggest that translocated peptides can alter cytoplasmic membrane septum formation, inhibit cell-wall synthesis, inhibit nucleic-acid synthesis, inhibits protein synthesis or inhibit enzymatic activity.
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides are an abundant and diverse group of molecules that are produced by many tissues and cell types in a variety of invertebrate, plant and animal species. Their amino acid composition, amphipathicity, cationic charge and size allow them to attach to and insert into membrane bilayers to form pores by 'barrel-stave', 'carpet' or 'toroidal-pore' mechanisms. Although these models are helpful for defining mechanisms of antimicrobial peptide activity, their relevance to how peptides damage and kill microorganisms still need to be clarified. Recently, there has been speculation that transmembrane pore formation is not the only mechanism of microbial killing. In fact several observations suggest that translocated peptides can alter cytoplasmic membrane septum formation, inhibit cell-wall synthesis, inhibit nucleic-acid synthesis, inhibit protein synthesis or inhibit enzymatic activity. In this review the different models of antimicrobial-peptide-induced pore formation and cell killing are presented.

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Photo-Inspired Antibacterial Activity and Wound Healing Acceleration by Hydrogel Embedded with Ag/Ag@AgCl/ZnO Nanostructures.

TL;DR: In vivo results show that release of Ag+ and Zn2+ stimulates the immune function to produce a large number of white blood cells and neutrophils (2-4 times more than the control), thereby producing the synergistic antibacterial effects and accelerated wound healing.
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Multifunctional Cationic Host Defence Peptides and Their Clinical Applications

TL;DR: An overview of the antimicrobial and immunomodulatory activities of cationic HDPs is provided, and their potential application as beneficial therapeutics in overcoming infectious diseases is discussed.
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Antibacterial Coatings: Challenges, Perspectives, and Opportunities

TL;DR: This work reviews release-based antibacterial coatings and highlights recent approaches aimed at controlling the release of antibacterial agents, imparting multi-functionality, and enhancing long-term stability.
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The antimicrobial peptides and their potential clinical applications

TL;DR: To open the clinical applications, it is necessary and important to develop the synthetic and long-lasting AMP analogs that overcome the disadvantages of their natural peptides and the potential problems for the drug candidates.
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Antimicrobial peptides: general overview and clinical implications in human health and disease.

TL;DR: This review focuses on cathelicin and defensins, the most documented human AMPs, and discusses their antimicrobial activity and pleiotropic immunomodulating effects on inflammatory and infectious diseases.
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TL;DR: Raster3D is discussed, which is a suite of programs for molecular graphics, which must compromise the quality of rendered images to achieve rendering speeds high enough for useful interactive manipulation of three-dimensional objects.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: This review, inspired by a spate of recent studies ofdefensins in human diseases and animal models, focuses on the biological function of defensins.
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