RL-37, an alpha-helical antimicrobial peptide of the rhesus monkey

C Zhao, T Nguyen, LM Boo, T Hong… - Antimicrobial agents …, 2001 - Am Soc Microbiol
C Zhao, T Nguyen, LM Boo, T Hong, C Espiritu, D Orlov, W Wang, A Waring, RI Lehrer
Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2001Am Soc Microbiol
Rhesus monkey bone marrow expresses a cathelicidin whose C-terminal domain comprises
a 37-residue alpha-helical peptide (RL-37) that resembles human LL-37. Like its human
counterpart, RL-37 rapidly permeabilized the membranes of Escherichia coli ML-35p and
lysed liposomes that simulated bacterial membranes. When tested in media whose NaCl
concentrations approximated those of extracellular fluids, RL-37 was considerably more
active than LL-37 against staphylococci. Whereas human LL-37 contains five acidic …
Abstract
Rhesus monkey bone marrow expresses a cathelicidin whose C-terminal domain comprises a 37-residue alpha-helical peptide (RL-37) that resembles human LL-37. Like its human counterpart, RL-37 rapidly permeabilized the membranes of Escherichia coli ML-35p and lysed liposomes that simulated bacterial membranes. When tested in media whose NaCl concentrations approximated those of extracellular fluids, RL-37 was considerably more active than LL-37 against staphylococci. Whereas human LL-37 contains five acidic residues and has a net charge of +6, rhesus RL-37 has only two acidic residues and a net charge of +8. Speculating that the multiple acidic residues of human LL-37 reduced its efficacy against staphylococci, we made a peptide (LL-37 pentamide) in which each aspartic acid of LL-37 was replaced by an asparagine and each glutamic acid was replaced by a glutamine. LL-37 pentamide's antistaphylococcal activity was substantially greater than that of LL-37. Thus, although the precursor of LL-37 is induced in human skin keratinocytes by injury or inflammation, its insufficiently cationic antimicrobial domain may contribute to the success of staphylococci in colonizing and infecting human skin.
American Society for Microbiology