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Novel bioactive peptides from PD-L1/2, a type 1 ribosome inactivating protein from Phytolacca dioica L. Evaluation of their antimicrobial properties and anti-biofilm activities

Authors :
Katia Pane
Eugenio Notomista
Cesar de la Fuente-Nunez
Angela Arciello
Rosa Gaglione
Andrea Bosso
Elio Pizzo
Nicola Landi
Rosita Russo
Marcelo D. T. Torres
Alberto Di Donato
Sara Ragucci
Antimo Di Maro
Pizzo, Elio
Pane, Katia
Bosso, Andrea
Landi, Nicola
Ragucci, Sara
Russo, Rosita
Gaglione, Rosa
Torres, Marcelo D. T.
de la Fuente-Nunez, Cesar
Arciello, Angela
Di Donato, Alberto
Notomista, Eugenio
Di Maro, Antimo
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Antimicrobial peptides, also called Host Defence Peptides (HDPs), are effectors of innate immune response found in all living organisms. In a previous report, we have identified by chemical fragmentation, and characterized the first cryptic antimicrobial peptide in PD-L4, a type 1 ribosome inactivating protein (RIP) from leaves of Phytolacca dioica L. We applied a recently developed bioinformatic approach to a further member of the differently expressed pool of type 1 RIPs from P. dioica (PD-L1/2), and identified two novel putative cryptic HDPs in its N-terminal domain. These two peptides, here named IKY31 and IKY23, exhibit antibacterial activities against planktonic bacterial cells and, interestingly, significant anti-biofilm properties against two Gram-negative strains. Here, we describe that PD-L1/2 derived peptides are able to induce a strong dose-dependent reduction in biofilm biomass, affect biofilm thickness and, in the case of IKY31, interfere with cell-to-cell adhesion, likely by affecting biofilm structural components. In addition to these findings, we found that both PD-L1/2 derived peptides are able to assume stable helical conformations in the presence of membrane mimicking agents (SDS and TFE) and intriguingly beta structures when incubated with extracellular bacterial wall components (LPS and alginate). Overall, the data collected in this work provide further evidence of the importance of cryptic peptides derived from type 1 RIPs in host/pathogen interactions, especially under pathophysiological conditions induced by biofilm forming bacteria. This suggests a new possible role of RIPs as precursors of antimicrobial and anti-biofilm agents, likely released upon defensive proteolytic processes, which may be involved in plant homeostasis.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7ff293a08a50a94bcd92427285739680