Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance remains a great threat to global health. In response to the World Health Organizations’ global call for action, nature has been explored for novel and safe antimicrobial candidates. To date, fish have gained recognition as potential source of safe, broad spectrum and effective antimicrobial therapeutics. The use of computational methods to design antimicrobial candidates of industrial application has however, been lagging behind. To fill the gap and contribute to the current fish-derived antimicrobial peptide repertoire, this study used Support Vector Machines algorithm to fish out fish-antimicrobial peptide-motif candidates encrypted in 127 peptides submitted at the Antimicrobial Peptide Database (APD3), steered by their physico-chemical characteristics (i.e., positive net charge, hydrophobicity, stability, molecular weight and sequence length). The best two novel antimicrobial peptide-motifs (A15_B, A15_E) with the lowest instability index (−28.25, −22.49, respectively) and highest isoelectric point (pI) index (10.48 for each) were selected for further analysis. Their 3D structures were predicted using I-TASSER and PEP-FOLD servers while ProSA, PROCHECK, and ANOLEA were used to validate them. The models predicted by I-TASSER were found to be better than those predicted by PEP-FOLD upon validation. Two I-TASSER models with the lowest c-score of −0.10 and −0.30 for A15_B and A15_E peptide-motifs, respectively, were selected for docking against known bacterial-antimicrobial target-proteins retrieved from protein databank (PDB). Carbapenam-3-carboxylate synthase (PDB ID; 4oj8) yielded the lowest docking energy (−8.80 and −7.80 Kcal/mol) against motif A15_B and A15_E, respectively, using AutoDock VINA. Further, in addition to Carbapenam-3-carboxylate synthase, these peptides (A15_B and A15_E) were found to as well bind to membrane protein (PDB ID: 1by3) and Carbapenem synthetase (PDB: 1q15) when ClusPro and HPEPDOCK tools were used. The membrane protein yielded docking energy scores (DES): −290.094, −270.751; coefficient weight (CW): −763.6, 763.3 for A15_B and A15_E) whereas, Carbapenem synthetase (PDB: 1q15) had a DES of −236.802, −262.75 and a CW of −819.7, −829.7 for peptides A15_B and A15_E, respectively. Motif A15_B of amino acid positions 2–19 in Pleurocidin exhibited the strongest in silico antimicrobial potentials. This segment could be a good biological candidate of great application in pharmaceutical industries as an antimicrobial drug candidate.

Highlights

  • Infections caused by drug resistant bacteria remain one of the leading causes of death worldwide (Martín-Rodríguez et al, 2016), as the potential of conventional antibiotics to combat such microbial infections fall (Tillotson and Zinner, 2017)

  • In this study we report findings of motif design, target identification and target interactions with putative antimicrobial peptide motif derived from fish

  • Seven peptide-motifs (Table 3), from which two peptide-motifs (A15_B and A15_E) with the highest stability and highest antimicrobial probability (0.982) were selected for docking studies. Both peptides were found to be from the sequence of Pleurocidin; an antimicrobial peptide (AMP) secreted by a winter flounder fish, P. americanus located between amino acids 2–19 and 5–22, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Infections caused by drug resistant bacteria remain one of the leading causes of death worldwide (Martín-Rodríguez et al, 2016), as the potential of conventional antibiotics to combat such microbial infections fall (Tillotson and Zinner, 2017). Polymixin B and Colistin are among the only standing antibiotics for the treatment of multiple drug resistant bacteria including the notorious Acinetobacter baumanni, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Klebsiella pneumoniae as the last line antibiotics (Falagas and Kasiakou, 2005). Their ability to withstand resistance has been attributed to their non-specific mechanism of action, multiple target sites and presence of rare D-amino acids (Ageitos and Villa, 2016). These good attributes have led to an intensified search for novel peptide antibiotics from diverse forms of life

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