Abstract

Proline-rich antimicrobial peptides (PrAMPs) represent promising alternative therapeutic options for the treatment of multidrug-resistant bacterial infections. PrAMPs are predominantly active against Gram-negative bacteria by inhibiting protein expression via at least two different modes of action, i.e., blocking the ribosomal exit tunnel of 70S ribosomes (oncocin-type binding) or inhibiting the assembly of the 50S ribosomal subunit (apidaecin-type binding). The in vivo efficacy and favorable biodistribution of oncocins confirmed the therapeutic potential of short PrAMPs for the first time, whereas the in vivo evaluation of apidaecins is still limited despite the promising efficacy of apidaecin-analog Api88 in an intraperitoneal murine infection model. Here, the in vivo efficacy of apidaecin-analog Api137 was studied, which rescued all NMRI mice from a lethal intraperitoneal infection with E. coli ATCC 25922 when administered three times intraperitoneal at doses of 0.6 mg/kg starting 1 h after infection. When Api88 and Api137 were administered intravenous or intraperitoneal at doses of 5 and 20 mg/kg, their plasma levels were similarly low (<3 μg/mL) and four-fold lower than for oncocin-analog Onc72. This contradicted earlier expectation based on the very low serum stability of Api88 with a half-life time of only ~5 min compared to ~6 and ~3 h for Api137 and Onc72, respectively. Pharmacokinetic data relying on a sensitive mass spectrometry method utilizing multiple reaction monitoring and isotope-labeled peptides revealed that Api88 and Api137 were present in blood, urine, and kidney, and liver homogenates at similar levels accompanied by the same major metabolites comprising residues 1–16 and 1–17. The pretended discrepancy was solved, when all peptides were incubated in peritoneal lavage. Api137 was rapidly degraded at the C-terminus, while Api88 was rather stable despite releasing the same degradation products. Onc72 was very stable explaining its higher plasma levels compared to Api88 and Api137 after intraperitoneal administration illuminating its good in vivo efficacy. The data indicate that the degradation of therapeutic peptides should be studied in serum and further body fluids. Moreover, the high efficacy in murine infection models and the fast clearance of Api88 and Api137 within ~60 min after intravenous and ~90 min after intraperitoneal injections indicate that their in vivo efficacy relates to the maximal peptide concentration achieved in blood.

Highlights

  • Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are considered as promising alternatives to common antibiotics that threateningly lose their therapeutic potentials against multidrug-resistant pathogens (Fox, 2013; Wang et al, 2015)

  • Together with previous reports on the pharmacokinetics and in vivo efficacy of Onc72 and Onc112 (Knappe et al, 2012; Holfeld et al, 2015; Schmidt et al, 2016) the results presented here for Api88 and Api137 provide the first comprehensive representation of the therapeutic potential of insect-derived proline-rich AMPs (PrAMPs)

  • Api88 administered intraperitoneally rescued all NMRI mice in a lethal E. coli ATCC 25922 infection model at doses of 2.5 and 1.25 mg/kg (Figure 1A; Czihal et al, 2012)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are considered as promising alternatives to common antibiotics that threateningly lose their therapeutic potentials against multidrug-resistant pathogens (Fox, 2013; Wang et al, 2015). The diabetes peptide drugs exenatide and pramlintide are given at daily doses of 20 μg (Byetta R ; ∼0.5 μg/kg) and 120 μg (Symlin R ; ∼1.5 μg/kg; Heine et al, 2005; Hay et al, 2015), while antimicrobial peptides are usually administered at 50- to 100-fold higher doses (>5 mg/kg) in order to achieve high in vivo efficacies (Benincasa et al, 2010; Szabo et al, 2010; Brunetti et al, 2016) This is true for proline-rich AMPs (PrAMPs), such as insect-derived oncocin and apidaecin analogs that showed protective effects in murine intraperitoneal and intramuscular infections with Escherichia coli ATCC 25922 and antibiotic-susceptible and -resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae strains (Czihal et al, 2012; Knappe et al, 2012, 2015; Ostorhazi et al, 2014; Schmidt et al, 2016). Despite its low serum stability in vitro, Api was highly efficient in a lethal NMRI mouse model of intraperitoneal sepsis providing 100% survival rates at doses of 1.25 mg/kg (Czihal et al, 2012)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call