Pig small intestine was used as starting material for a batchwise isolation of a peptide fraction enriched in antibacterial activities against Escherichia coli (anti-Ec factor) and against Bacillus megaterium (anti-Bm factor). Separation and further purification were by different types of chromatography. Sequence analysis showed the anti-Bm factor to be apparently similar to vasoactive intestinal peptide. The anti-Ec factor was found to have a 31-residue sequence that was cecropin-like. It was named cecropin P1 and its structure was confirmed by solid-phase synthesis. Synthetic cecropin P1 with and without C-terminal amide was assayed on eight different bacteria. Mobility comparison between synthetic and natural cecropin P1 indicates that the natural peptide has a free C-terminal carboxyl group.
We recently isolated from pig intestine and characterized a 31-residue antibacterial peptide named cecropin PI with activity against Escherichia coli and several other Gram-negative bacteria. The isolation involved a number of batch-wise steps followed by several chromatography steps. The continued investigation of these antibacterial peptides has now yielded another antibacterial peptide with high activity against both E. coli and Bacillus megatrrium. Amino acid analysis showed a very high content of proline (49 mol%) and arginine (26 mol%), an intermediate level of phenylalanine and low levels of leucine, tyrosine, isoleucine, and glycine. The primary structure was determined by a combination of Edman degradation, plasma desorption mass spectrometry and C-terminal sequence analysis by carboxypeptidase Y degradation using capillary zone electrophoresis for detection of liberated residues. The calculated molecular mass was 4719.7 Da, which is in excellent agreement with 4719 D a obtained by plasma desorption mass spectrometry. The peptide was named PR-39 (proline-arginine-rich with a size of 39 residues). The lethal concentration of the peptide was determined against six Gram-negative and four Gram-positive strains of bacteria.
Contents
Introduction (Table 1)
Lysozyme
Two main forms of attacin
The cecropins and their precursor forms
Chemical synthesis of cecropins and three‐dimensional structure of cecropin A
Spectrum and mechanism of action of cecropins
Other factors related to the immune response
Genes for cecropia immune proteins
The place of synthesis of the immune proteins
Discussion
Magainins and cecropins are families of peptides with broad antimicrobial and antiparasitic activities derived respectively from the skin of frogs or from giant silk moths. In insects, cecropins function as part of an inducible immune system against a number of bacterial infections. When injected into anopheline mosquitoes previously infected with a variety of Plasmodium species, both magainins and cecropins disrupt sporogonic development by aborting the normal development of oocysts; sporozoites are not formed and the vector cannot transmit the parasite to another host. It may be possible to induce effective transmission-blocking immunity in the mosquito vector by the introduction and expression of genes coding for magainins, cecropins, or similarly acting parasiticidal peptides into the mosquito genome.
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