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An ancestral host defence peptide within human β-defensin 3 recapitulates the antibacterial and antiviral activity of the full-length molecule

Authors :
Daniela Sarnataro
Olga Scudiero
Vincenzo Granata
Jonathan K. Ball
Stefania Galdiero
Massimiliano Galdiero
Francesco Salvatore
Richard A. Urbanowicz
Ersilia Nigro
Aurora Daniele
Antonello Pessi
Gerardo Zambrano
Alfonso Carotenuto
Veronica Folliero
Irene Colavita
Nigro, Ersilia
Colavita, Irene
Sarnataro, Daniela
Scudiero, Olga
Zambrano, Gerardo
Granata, Vincenzo
Daniele, Aurora
Carotenuto, Alfonso
Galdiero, Stefania
Folliero, Veronica
Galdiero, Massimiliano
Urbanowicz, Richard A.
Ball, Jonathan K.
Salvatore, Francesco
Pessi, Antonello
Urbanowicz, Richard A
Ball, Jonathan K
Source :
Scientific Reports
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2015.

Abstract

Host defence peptides (HDPs) are critical components of innate immunity. Despite their diversity, they share common features including a structural signature, designated "γ-core motif". We reasoned that for each HDPs evolved from an ancestral γ-core, the latter should be the evolutionary starting point of the molecule, i.e. it should represent a structural scaffold for the modular construction of the full-length molecule, and possess biological properties. We explored the γ-core of human β-defensin 3 (HBD3) and found that it: (a) is the folding nucleus of HBD3; (b) folds rapidly and is stable in human serum; (c) displays antibacterial activity; (d) binds to CD98, which mediates HBD3 internalization in eukaryotic cells; (e) exerts antiviral activity against human immunodeficiency virus and herpes simplex virus; and (f) is not toxic to human cells. These results demonstrate that the γ-core within HBD3 is the ancestral core of the full-length molecule and is a viable HDP per se, since it is endowed with the most important biological features of HBD3. Notably, the small, stable scaffold of the HBD3 γ-core can be exploited to design disease-specific antimicrobial agents. Host defence peptides (HDPs) are critical components of innate immunity. Despite their diversity, they share common features including a structural signature, designated "gamma-core motif". We reasoned that for each HDPs evolved from an ancestral gamma-core, the latter should be the evolutionary starting point of the molecule, i.e. it should represent a structural scaffold for the modular construction of the full-length molecule, and possess biological properties. We explored the gamma-core of human beta-defensin 3 (HBD3) and found that it: (a) is the folding nucleus of HBD3; (b) folds rapidly and is stable in human serum; (c) displays antibacterial activity; (d) binds to CD98, which mediates HBD3 internalization in eukaryotic cells; (e) exerts antiviral activity against human immunodeficiency virus and herpes simplex virus; and (f) is not toxic to human cells. These results demonstrate that the gamma-core within HBD3 is the ancestral core of the full-length molecule and is a viable HDP per se, since it is endowed with the most important biological features of HBD3. Notably, the small, stable scaffold of the HBD3 gamma-core can be exploited to design disease-specific antimicrobial agents.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a99d8970916f7cbafb52744966a7a925
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/srep18450