Abstract

BackgroundAntimicrobial peptides have become important candidates as new antibiotics against resistant bacterial strains. However, the major industrial manufacture of antimicrobial peptides is chemical synthesis with high costs and in relatively small scale. The Ub-tag and SUMO-tag are useful for increasing the yield of enzymes and other proteins in expression system. In this study, antimicrobial peptide A20L (KWKSFLKTFKSAKKTVLHTLLKAISS), a derivative of V13K in the previous study is used as a template to be expressed in different Ub-tag and human SUMO tag systems to compare the prokaryotic expression approaches of antimicrobial peptide. The antibacterial mechanism of action and membrane specificity of A20L was further studied.MethodsWe fused the Ub and SUMO1/2/3/4 with A20L to construct expression plasmids. Ub-A20L and SUMO1/2/34 gene sequences were inserted into the pHUE plasmids and pET-28b+ plasmids, respectively, to construct pHUE-A20L plasmids and pET-28b+-SUMO1/2/3/4-A20L plasmids. These plasmids were transformed into E. coli Rosetta (DE3) and induced with IPTG to express Ub-A20L and SUMO1/2/3/4 fusion proteins. The recombinant proteins were found in the soluble fraction after being over expressed in E. coli Rosetta (DE3). Antibacterial and hemolytic activities and membrane permeabilization ability of A20L were determined. Peptide structure was also studied by circular dichroism experiments.ResultsA20L (KWKSFLKTFKSAKKTVLHTLLKAISS) was successfully expressed by fusion with an ubiquitin tag (Ub-tag) and human SUMO tags (SUMO1/2/3/4-tags). A20L exhibited antimicrobial activity against various Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. Based on the hemolytic activity against human red blood cells, A20L showed good specificity against bacteria. The circular dichroism experiments illustrated that A20L was transferred into an α-helical structure in the presence of hydrophobic environment. The antibacterial mechanism of action and membrane specificity of A20L was further studied using membrane permeabilization experiments and tryptophan fluorescence and quenching experiments in liposomes.ConclusionsThe Ub-tag and human SUMO-tags represent good alternatives to chemical synthesis for the industrial production of antimicrobial peptides with low costs and high yields. The antibacterial mechanism of action of A20L was proved as membrane disruption. A20L showed stronger specificity on liposomes mimicking bacterial membrane than those mimicking eukaryotic cell membrane, which is consistent with the biological activity studies.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12896-015-0189-x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Antimicrobial peptides have become important candidates as new antibiotics against resistant bacterial strains

  • Expression, purification and digestion of Ub-A20L and SUMO1/2/3/4-A20L To explore the function of Ub protein and SUMO1/2/3/ 4 proteins as fusion tags, we fused the Ub and SUMO1/ 2/3/4 with A20L to construct expression plasmids

  • It was interesting to see that all the human ubiquitin tag (Ub-tag) and SUMO1/2/3/4-tags were effective as fusion tags of Antimicrobial peptide (AMP); the Ub-tag promoted the soluble expression of the AMP, and produced a higher yield than the human SUMO1/2/3/4-tags

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Summary

Introduction

Antimicrobial peptides have become important candidates as new antibiotics against resistant bacterial strains. The major industrial manufacture of antimicrobial peptides is chemical synthesis with high costs and in relatively small scale. Bacteria are developing resistance to antibiotics at an alarming rate, the development of new antibiotic alternatives continues to be extremely urgent [1, 2] Because of their antibacterial properties, antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are expected to become ideal antibiotic alternatives [3]. A prokaryotic expression system can reduce the production cost of AMPs and increase their large-scale applications [8]. Previous studies have shown that use of a fusion tag system can achieve effective expression of AMPs [9]. New fusion tags useful to improve the yield of AMPs are continuously coming out

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