Abstract

Owing to their potential applicability against multidrug-resistant bacteria, antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) or host defense peptides (HDPs) gain increased attention. Besides diverse immunomodulatory roles, their classical mechanism of action mostly involves membrane disruption of microbes. Notably, their unbalanced overexpression has also been associated with host cell cytotoxicity in various diseases. Relatedly, AMPs can be subject to aggregate formation, either via self-assembly or together with other compounds, which has demonstrated a modulation effect on their biological functions, thus highly relevant both for drug targeting projects and understanding their in vivo actions. However, the molecular aspects of the related assembly formation are not understood. Here, we focused in detail on an experimentally studied AMP–drug system, i.e., CM15–suramin, and performed all-atom and coarse-grain (CG) simulations. Results obtained for all systems were in close line with experimental observations and indicate that the CM15–suramin aggregation is an energetically favorable and dynamic process. In the presence of bilayers, the peptide–drug assembly formation was highly dependent on lipid composition, and peptide aggregates themselves were also capable of binding to the membranes. Interestingly, longer CG simulations with zwitterionic membranes indicated an intermediate state in the presence of both AMP–drug assemblies and monomeric peptides located on the membrane surface. In sharp contrast, larger AMP–drug aggregates could not be detected with a negatively charged membrane, rather the AMPs penetrated its surface in a monomeric form, in line with previous in vitro observations. Considering experimental and theoretical results, it is promoted that in biological systems, cationic AMPs may often form associates with anionic compounds in a reversible manner, resulting in lower bioactivity. This is only mildly affected by zwitterionic membranes; however, membranes with a negative charge strongly alter the energetic preference of AMP assemblies, resulting in the dissolution of the complexes into the membrane. The phenomenon observed here at a molecular level can be followed in several experimental systems studied recently, where peptides interact with food colors, drug molecules, or endogenous compounds, which strongly indicates that reversible associate formation is a general phenomenon for these complexes. These results are hoped to be exploited in novel therapeutic strategies aiming to use peptides as drug targets and control AMP bioactivity by directed assembly formation.

Highlights

  • Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs or host defense peptides, HDPs, when their complex immunomodulatory roles are emphasized) are crucial compounds produced by multicellular organisms to protect the host from pathogenic microbes

  • We have provided a detailed analysis and insight at the molecular level on how suramin impacts the secondary structure of CM15 by increasing its helicity, in line with experimental observations

  • We have found that peptide CM15 almost immediately binds to and, after a while, partially penetrates the head group region of the phosphatidylcholine− phosphatidylglycerol (PC/PG) membrane

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Summary

Introduction

Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs or host defense peptides, HDPs, when their complex immunomodulatory roles are emphasized) are crucial compounds produced by multicellular organisms to protect the host from pathogenic microbes They are widely considered to be a promising solution against multidrug-resistant bacteria due to their slower emergence of resistance and broad bacterial susceptibility.[1−5] A vast majority of them have no more than 50 amino acids in their peptide sequence with a mean charge of +3 and a ∼54% average hydrophobicity.[6] The broad-spectral activity of antimicrobial peptides is primarily associated with their structural diversity and cationic nature, but these properties can manifest in several, sometimes controversial, modes of their mechanism of action.[7−11] Besides the above beneficial properties, their potential cytotoxicity, sensitivity to degrading proteases, and their high production costs, at least on lower scales,[12−14] are clear shortcomings that have to be appreciated and addressed properly. It is expected that a better understanding of associate formation could lead us a step forward toward successful pharmaceutical applications, in immune regulation

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