Self-Assembly of Antimicrobial Peptoids Impacts Their Biological Effects on ESKAPE Bacterial Pathogens.
Josefine Eilsø NielsenMorgan Ashley AlfordDeborah Bow Yue YungNatalia MolchanovaJohn A FortkortJennifer S LinGill DiamondRobert E W HancockHåvard JenssenDaniel PletzerReidar LundAnnelise E BarronPublished in: ACS infectious diseases (2022)
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are promising pharmaceutical candidates for the prevention and treatment of infections caused by multidrug-resistant ESKAPE pathogens, which are responsible for the majority of hospital-acquired infections. Clinical translation of AMPs has been limited, in part by apparent toxicity on systemic dosing and by instability arising from susceptibility to proteolysis. Peptoids (sequence-specific oligo- N -substituted glycines) resist proteolytic digestion and thus are of value as AMP mimics. Only a few natural AMPs such as LL-37 and polymyxin self-assemble in solution; whether antimicrobial peptoids mimic these properties has been unknown. Here, we examine the antibacterial efficacy and dynamic self-assembly in aqueous media of eight peptoid mimics of cationic AMPs designed to self-assemble and two nonassembling controls. These amphipathic peptoids self-assembled in different ways, as determined by small-angle X-ray scattering; some adopt helical bundles, while others form core-shell ellipsoidal or worm-like micelles. Interestingly, many of these peptoid assemblies show promising antibacterial, antibiofilm activity in vitro in media, under host-mimicking conditions and antiabscess activity in vivo. While self-assembly correlated overall with antibacterial efficacy, this correlation was imperfect. Certain self-assembled morphologies seem better-suited for antibacterial activity. In particular, a peptoid exhibiting a high fraction of long, worm-like micelles showed reduced antibacterial, antibiofilm, and antiabscess activity against ESKAPE pathogens compared with peptoids that form ellipsoidal or bundled assemblies. This is the first report of self-assembling peptoid antibacterials with activity against in vivo biofilm-like infections relevant to clinical medicine.
Keyphrases
- gram negative
- multidrug resistant
- silver nanoparticles
- staphylococcus aureus
- drug delivery
- high resolution
- healthcare
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- emergency department
- oxidative stress
- cancer therapy
- cystic fibrosis
- drug resistant
- mass spectrometry
- acinetobacter baumannii
- drug release
- essential oil
- molecular docking
- amino acid
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- adverse drug
- drug induced
- anaerobic digestion
- smoking cessation