Pathogen-specific antimicrobials engineered de novo through membrane-protein biomimicry
仿生学
病菌
抗菌肽
生物
纳米技术
抗菌剂
微生物学
材料科学
作者
Andrew Simonson,Agustey Mongia,Matthew R. Aronson,John N. Alumasa,Dennis Chan,Atip Lawanprasert,Michael Howe,Adam Bolotsky,Tapas K. Mal,Christy George,Aida Ebrahimi,Anthony D. Baughn,Elizabeth A. Proctor,Kenneth C. Keiler,Scott H. Medina
Precision antimicrobials aim to kill pathogens without damaging commensal bacteria in the host, and thereby cure disease without antibiotic-associated dysbiosis. Here we report the de novo design of a synthetic host defence peptide that targets a specific pathogen by mimicking key molecular features of the pathogen's channel-forming membrane proteins. By exploiting physical and structural vulnerabilities within the pathogen's cellular envelope, we designed a peptide sequence that undergoes instructed tryptophan-zippered assembly within the mycolic acid-rich outer membrane of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to specifically kill the pathogen without collateral toxicity towards lung commensal bacteria or host tissue. These mycomembrane-templated assemblies elicit rapid mycobactericidal activity and enhance the potency of antibiotics by improving their otherwise poor diffusion across the rigid M. tuberculosis envelope with respect to agents that exploit transmembrane protein channels for antimycobacterial activity. This biomimetic strategy may aid the design of other narrow-spectrum antimicrobial peptides. Mimicking the molecular architecture of channel-forming membrane proteins of a target microbe can be used to design host defence peptides that specifically target a particular pathogen, as shown here for Mycobacterium tuberculosis.