Abstract

Animal venoms are a mixture of peptides and proteins that serve two basic biological functions: predation and defense against both predators and microbes. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are a common component extensively present in various scorpion venoms (herein abbreviated as svAMPs). However, their roles in predation and defense against predators and potential as drugs are poorly understood. Here, we report five new venom peptides with antimicrobial activity from two Mesobuthus scorpion species. These α-helical linear peptides displayed highly bactericidal activity toward all the Gram-positive bacteria used here but differential activity against Gram-negative bacteria and fungi. In addition to the antibiotic activity, these AMPs displayed lethality to houseflies and hemotoxin-like toxicity on mice by causing hemolysis, tissue damage and inducing inflammatory pain. Unlike AMPs from other origins, these venom-derived AMPs seem to be unsuitable as anti-infective drugs due to their high hemolysis and low serum stability. However, MeuTXKβ1, a known two-domain Mesobuthus AMP, is an exception since it exhibits high activity toward antibiotic resistant Staphylococci clinical isolates with low hemolysis and high serum stability. The findings that the classical AMPs play predatory and defensive roles indicate that the multifunctionality of scorpion venom components is an intrinsic feature likely evolved by natural selection from microbes, prey and predators of scorpions. This definitely provides an excellent system in which one can study how a protein adaptively evolves novel functions in a new environment. Meantimes, new strategies are needed to remove the toxicity of svAMPs on eukaryotic cells when they are used as leads for anti-infective drugs.

Highlights

  • The venoms of various animals are produced in specialized glands that are associated with a delivery device, by which the compound can be directly introduced into the body of a recipient (Brodie, 2009)

  • Scorpion venoms contain a variety of relatively low-abundant antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) that are active on a wide range of microbes, such as bacteria, fungi, viruses, and protozoans (Zeng et al, 2005; du Plessis et al, 2008; Almaaytah and Albalas, 2014; Harrison et al, 2014; Ortiz et al, 2015)

  • MeuFSPL-1 and MeuFSPL-2 are two M. eupeus scorpion venom antimicrobial peptide (svAMP) deduced from their nucleotide sequences (Table S2)

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Summary

Introduction

The venoms of various animals (e.g., scorpions, cone snails, snakes, spiders, sea anemones, and lizards) are produced in specialized glands that are associated with a delivery device, by which the compound can be directly introduced into the body of a recipient (Brodie, 2009). Scorpion venoms contain a variety of relatively low-abundant antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) that are active on a wide range of microbes, such as bacteria, fungi, viruses, and protozoans (Zeng et al, 2005; du Plessis et al, 2008; Almaaytah and Albalas, 2014; Harrison et al, 2014; Ortiz et al, 2015). These scorpion venom AMPs (svAMPs) are characterized by biochemical purification from the venoms and molecular cloning from the venom glands. Many more svAMPs were found by cDNA cloning followed by functional identification with synthetic peptides (e.g., Meucin-13, Meucin-18, Meucin, and Meucin-25 from Mesobuthus eupeus; Mucroporin from Lychas Mucronatus, Imcroporin from Isometrus maculates, and Ctriporin from Chaerilus tricostatus, etc., Dai et al, 2008; Gao et al, 2009, 2010; Zhao et al, 2009; Fan et al, 2011)

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