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Lectins as antimicrobial agents.

Luana Cassandra Breintenbach Barroso CoelhoP Marcelino Dos Santos SilvaW Felix de OliveiraM C de MouraE Viana PontualF Soares GomesP M Guedes PaivaLuana Cassandra B B CoelhoM T Dos Santos Correia
Published in: Journal of applied microbiology (2018)
The resistance of micro-organisms to antimicrobial agents has been a challenge to treat animal and human infections, and for environmental control. Lectins are natural proteins and some are potent antimicrobials through binding to carbohydrates on microbial surfaces. Oligomerization state of lectins can influence their biological activity and maximum binding capacity; the association among lectin polypeptide chains can alter the carbohydrate-lectin binding dissociation rate constants. Antimicrobial mechanisms of lectins include the pore formation ability, followed by changes in the cell permeability and latter, indicates interactions with the bacterial cell wall components. In addition, the antifungal activity of lectins is associated with the chitin-binding property, resulting in the disintegration of the cell wall or the arrest of de novo synthesis from the cell wall during fungal development or division. Quorum sensing is a cell-to-cell communication process that allows interspecies and interkingdom signalling which coordinate virulence genes; antiquorum-sensing therapies are described for animal and plant lectins. This review article, among other approaches, evaluates lectins as antimicrobials.
Keyphrases
  • cell wall
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • single cell
  • cell therapy
  • endothelial cells
  • escherichia coli
  • stem cells
  • biofilm formation
  • cell proliferation
  • risk assessment
  • genome wide
  • cystic fibrosis
  • cell cycle
  • human health