1. Conformational analysis and cytotoxic activities of the frog skin host-defense peptide, hymenochirin-1Pa
Ilaria Serra, Mariano A Scorciapino, Giorgia Manzo, Mariano Casu, Andrea C Rinaldi, Samir Attoub, Milena Mechkarska, J Michael Conlon Peptides. 2014 Nov;61:114-21. doi: 10.1016/j.peptides.2014.08.017. Epub 2014 Sep 19.
Hymenochirin-1Pa (LKLSPKTKDTLKKVLKGAIKGAIAIASMA-NH2) is a host-defense peptide first isolated from skin secretions of the frog Pseudhymenochirus merlini (Pipidae). A nuclear magnetic resonance structural investigation demonstrates that the peptide has a random coil conformation in water but, in the membrane-mimetic solvent 50% (v/v) trifluoroethanol-water adopts a well-defined conformation characterized by two α-helical domains from residues K6 to G17 and from G21 to M28, with the N-terminal region unfolded. The presence of a GXXXG domain, the most common structural motif found at the interface between interacting trans-membrane helices, between residues 17 and 21, introduces a kink corresponding to a deviation from linearity of 93 ± 31°. Hymenochirin-1Pa shows broad spectrum anti-bacterial activity, including high potency against multidrug-resistant clinical isolates of Staphylococcus aureus, Acinetobacter baumannii, and Stenotrophomonas maltophilia. The peptide also shows high cytotoxic potency against human non-small lung adenocarcinoma A549 cells, breast adenocarcinoma MDA-MB-231 cells, and colorectal adenocarcinoma HT-29 cells but its therapeutic potential as an anti-cancer agent is limited by moderate hemolytic activity against human erythrocytes and lack of selectivity for tumor cells. Increasing cationicity of the peptide by substituting the Asp(9) residue by either L-Lys (K) or D-Lys (k) has relatively minor effects on antimicrobial and anti-tumor potencies but the [D9k] analog is non-hemolytic LC50 > 400 μM. Thus, [D9k]hymenochirin-1Pa may serve as a template for the design of non-toxic antimicrobial agents for use against multidrug-resistant pathogenic bacteria.
2. Characterization of the host-defense peptides from skin secretions of Merlin's clawed frog Pseudhymenochirus merlini: insights into phylogenetic relationships among the Pipidae
J Michael Conlon, Manju Prajeep, Milena Mechkarska, Laurent Coquet, Jérôme Leprince, Thierry Jouenne, Hubert Vaudry, Jay D King Comp Biochem Physiol Part D Genomics Proteomics. 2013 Dec;8(4):352-7. doi: 10.1016/j.cbd.2013.10.002. Epub 2013 Oct 12.
The family Pipidae comprises the genera Hymenochirus, Pipa, Pseudhymenochirus, Silurana, and Xenopus but phylogenetic relationships within the family are unclear. Peptidomic analysis of norepinephrine-stimulated skin secretions from Pseudhymenochirus merlini Chabanaud, 1920, the single species within the genus Pseudhymenochirus, led to identification of 13 host-defense peptides with antimicrobial activity. Two peptides (hymenochirin-1Pa and -1Pb) show structural similarity to hymenochirin-1B from Hymenochirus boettgeri and eight peptides (hymenochirin-5Pa, -5Pb, -5Pc, -5Pd, -5Pe, -5Pf, 5Pg and -5Ph) are structurally similar to each other and to hymenochirin-5B from H. boettgeri. Two peptides differing by a single amino acid (IKIPSFFRNILKKVGKEAVSLM/I AGALKQS), termed pseudhymenochirin-1Pa and -1Pb, and pseudhymenochirin-2Pa (GIFPIFAKLLGKVIKVASSLISKGRTE) do not resemble host-defense peptides previously isolated from pipid frogs. Hymenochirin-5Pe was the most abundant peptide in the secretions and hymenochirin-1Pa the most potent against Staphylococcus aureus (MIC=2.5μM) and Escherichia coli (MIC=10μM). The data support a close phylogenetic relationship between Hymenochirus and Pseudhymenochirus that is distinct from the Xenopodinae (Xenopus+Silurana) clade with Pipa sister-group to all other extant pipids.