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Limnonectin-1Fa

* Please kindly note that our products are not to be used for therapeutic purposes and cannot be sold to patients.

Limnonectin-1Fa is an antibacterial peptide isolated from Limnonectes fujianensis. It has activity against gram-negative bacteria.

Category
Functional Peptides
Catalog number
BAT-012617
Molecular Formula
C89H136N24O18S2
Molecular Weight
1898.3
Synonyms
Ser-Phe-Pro-Phe-Phe-Pro-Pro-Gly-Ile-Cys-Lys-Arg-Leu-Lys-Arg-Cys
Purity
97.0%
Sequence
SFPFFPPGIC(1)KRLKRC(1)
Storage
Store at -20°C
1. Hylaranins: prototypes of a new class of amphibian antimicrobial peptide from the skin secretion of the oriental broad-folded frog, Hylarana latouchii
Yan Lin, Nan Hu, Peng Lyu, Jie Ma, Lei Wang, Mei Zhou, Suhua Guo, Tianbao Chen, Chris Shaw Amino Acids. 2014 Apr;46(4):901-9. doi: 10.1007/s00726-013-1655-1. Epub 2013 Dec 31.
Amphibian skin secretions contain a broad spectrum of biologically active compounds, particularly antimicrobial peptides, which are considered to constitute a first line of defence against bacterial infection. Here we describe the identification of two prototype peptides representing a novel structural class of antimicrobial peptide from the skin secretion of the oriental broad-folded frog, Hylarana latouchii. Named hylaranin-L1 (GVLSAFKNALPGIMKIIVamide) and hylaranin-L2 (GVLSVIKNALPGIMRFIAamide), both peptides consist of 18 amino acid residues, are C-terminally amidated and are of unique primary structures. Their primary structures were initially deduced by MS/MS fragmentation sequencing from reverse-phase HPLC fractions of skin secretion that demonstrated antimicrobial activity. Subsequently, their precursor-encoding cDNAs were cloned from a skin secretion-derived cDNA library and their primary structures were confirmed unequivocally. Synthetic replicates of both peptides exhibited broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity with mean inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of 34 μM against Gram-negative Escherichia coli, 4.3 μM against Gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus and 4-9 μM against the yeast, Candida albicans. Both peptides exhibited little haemolytic activity (<6%) at the MICs for S. aureus and C. albicans. Amphibian skin secretions thus continue to provide novel antimicrobial peptide structures that may prove to be lead compounds in the design of new classes of anti-infection therapeutics.
2. Amphibian skin peptides and their corresponding cDNAs from single lyophilized secretion samples: identification of novel brevinins from three species of Chinese frogs
Tianbao Chen, Long Li, Mei Zhou, Pingfan Rao, Brian Walker, Chris Shaw Peptides. 2006 Jan;27(1):42-8. doi: 10.1016/j.peptides.2005.06.024. Epub 2005 Sep 1.
Brevinins are peptides of 24 amino acid residues, originally isolated from the skin of the Oriental frog, Rana brevipoda porsa, by nature of their microbicidal activity against a wide range of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria and against strains of pathogenic fungi. cDNA libraries were constructed from lyophilized skin secretion of three, unstudied species of Chinese frog, Odorrana schmackeri, Odorrana versabilis and Pelophylax plancyi fukienensis, using our recently developed technique. In this report, we describe the "shotgun" cloning of novel brevinins by means of 3'-RACE, using a "universal" degenerate primer directed towards a highly conserved nucleic acid sequence domain within the 5'-untranslated region of previously characterized frog skin peptide cDNAs. Novel brevinins, deduced from cloned cDNA open-reading frames, were subsequently identified as mature peptides in the same samples of respective species skin secretions. Bioinformatic analysis of both prepro-brevinin nucleic acid sequences and translated open-reading frame amino acid sequences revealed a highly conserved signal peptide domain and a hypervariable anti-microbial peptide-encoding domain. The experimental approach described here can thus rapidly provide robust structural data on skin anti-microbial peptides without harming the donor amphibians.
3. Rapid identification of precursor cDNAs encoding five structural classes of antimicrobial peptides from pickerel frog (Rana palustris) skin secretion by single step "shotgun" cloning
Mei Zhou, Lei Wang, Damian E Owens, Tianbao Chen, Brian Walker, Chris Shaw Peptides. 2007 Aug;28(8):1605-10. doi: 10.1016/j.peptides.2007.07.019. Epub 2007 Jul 21.
The skin secretion of the North American pickerel frog (Rana palustris) has long been known to have pronounced noxious/toxic properties and to be highly effective in defence against predators and against other sympatric amphibians. As it consists largely of a complex mixture of peptides, it has been subjected to systematic peptidomic study but there has been little focus on molecular cloning of peptide-encoding cDNAs and by deduction, the biosynthetic precursors that they encode. Here, we demonstrate that the cDNAs encoding the five major structural families of antimicrobial peptides can be elucidated by a single step "shotgun" cloning approach using a cDNA library constructed from the source material of the peptidomic studies--the defensive skin secretion itself. Using a degenerate primer pool designed to a highly conserved nucleic acid sequence 5' to the initiation codon of known antimicrobial peptide precursor transcripts, we amplified cDNA sequences representing five major classes of antimicrobial peptides, such as esculentins, brevinins, ranatuerins, palustrins and temporins. Bioinformatic comparisons of precursor open-reading frames and nucleic acid sequences revealed high degrees of structural similarities between analogous peptides of R. palustris and the Chinese bamboo odorous frog, Rana versabilis. This approach thus constitutes a robust technique that can be used either alone or ideally, in parallel with peptidomic analysis of skin secretion, to rapidly extract primary structural information on amphibian skin secretion peptides and their biosynthetic precursors.
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