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Antimicrobial peptides

About: Antimicrobial peptides is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 10645 publications have been published within this topic receiving 507688 citations. The topic is also known as: host defense peptide & antimicrobial protein.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Production of HBD-1 in the urogenital tract could contribute to local antimicrobial defense, and no intracellular storage sites were identified in renal or female reproductive tissues.
Abstract: Antimicrobial peptides are widely distributed mediators of innate host defense in animals and plants. A 36 amino acid antimicrobial peptide belonging to the defensin family, and named human beta-defensin-1 (HBD-1), was purified recently from hemodialysate fluid, but its tissue sources were not identified. By Northern blotting, we found the highest concentrations of HBD-1 mRNA in the kidney and the female reproductive tract. In situ hybridization localized the HBD-1 mRNA in the epithelial layers of the loops of Henle, distal tubules, and the collecting ducts of the kidney and the epithelial layers of the vagina, ectocervix, endocervix, uterus, and fallopian tubes in the female reproductive tract. Using a novel technique designed to detect cationic peptides in urine, we recovered several forms of HBD-1 ranging in length from 36 to 47 amino acid (aa) residues and differing from each other by amino terminal truncation. The total concentration of HBD-1 forms in voided urine was estimated at 10-100 microg/liter, with individual variations in the total amount of HBD-1 peptides and the relative proportion of HBD-1 forms. Multiple forms of HBD-1 (size 36-47 aa) were also found in the blood plasma, bound to carrier macromolecules that released the peptide under acid conditions, and in vaginal mucosal secretions (39, 40, and 44 aa). By immunostaining, HBD-1 was located in the kidney within the lumen of the loops of Henle, but no intracellular storage sites were identified in renal or female reproductive tissues. Recombinant HBD-1 forms (36, 39, and 42 aa) and natural HBD-1 forms were antimicrobial to laboratory and clinical strains of Escherichia coli at micromolar concentrations. HBD-1 activity was not changed appreciably by low pH, but was inhibited by high salt conditions. Some of the HBD-1 peptides retained their activity against E. coli in unconcentrated (low conductance) urine, and the 36 aa form was microbicidal even in normal (high conductance) urine. Production of HBD-1 in the urogenital tract could contribute to local antimicrobial defense.

739 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: During the past year, additional insights into systems that regulate antimicrobial peptide production in Drosophila were reported and studies that examined the potential contributions of antimacterial peptides to regional innate immunity gained in prominence.

738 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Huey W. Huang1
TL;DR: This model provides plausible explanations for the experimental findings that the susceptibility of different bacteria to a peptide is not directly correlated to its binding affinity, different peptides preferentially kill different pathogens, and peptides exhibit varying levels of lytic activity against different eukaryotic cells.
Abstract: The argument and experimental evidence are presented for a two-state model that explains the action of both helical and β-sheet antimicrobial peptides after they bind to the plasma membranes of cells. Each peptide has two distinct physical states of binding to lipid bilayers. At low peptide-to-lipid ratios (P/L), the peptide tends to adsorb in the lipid headgroup region in a functionally inactive state. At a P/L above a threshold value P/L*, the peptide forms a multiple-pore state that is lethal to a cell. The susceptibility of a cell to an antimicrobial peptide depends on the value of P/L* that is determined by the lipid composition of the cell membrane. This model provides plausible explanations for the experimental findings that the susceptibility of different bacteria to a peptide is not directly correlated to its binding affinity, different peptides preferentially kill different pathogens, and peptides exhibit varying levels of lytic activity against different eukaryotic cells.

709 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A novel protein family, showing a conserved proregion and a variable C‐terminal antimicrobial domain, and named0 cathelicidin, has been identified in mammalian myeloid cells and shows sequence similarity to members of the cystatin superfamily of cysteine proteinase inhibitors.

708 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The role of cathelicidin in skin inflammatory responses is confirmed and an explanation for the pathogenesis of rosacea is suggested by demonstrating that an exacerbated innate immune response can reproduce elements of this disease.
Abstract: Acne rosacea is an inflammatory skin disease that affects 3% of the US population over 30 years of age and is characterized by erythema, papulopustules and telangiectasia. The etiology of this disorder is unknown, although symptoms are exacerbated by factors that trigger innate immune responses, such as the release of cathelicidin antimicrobial peptides. Here we show that individuals with rosacea express abnormally high levels of cathelicidin in their facial skin and that the proteolytically processed forms of cathelicidin peptides found in rosacea are different from those present in normal individuals. These cathelicidin peptides are a result of a post-translational processing abnormality associated with an increase in stratum corneum tryptic enzyme (SCTE) in the epidermis. In mice, injection of the cathelicidin peptides found in rosacea, addition of SCTE, and increasing protease activity by targeted deletion of the serine protease inhibitor gene Spink5 each increases inflammation in mouse skin. The role of cathelicidin in enabling SCTE-mediated inflammation is verified in mice with a targeted deletion of Camp, the gene encoding cathelicidin. These findings confirm the role of cathelicidin in skin inflammatory responses and suggest an explanation for the pathogenesis of rosacea by demonstrating that an exacerbated innate immune response can reproduce elements of this disease.

707 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023512
20221,025
2021809
2020844
2019728
2018634