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The amphibian antimicrobial peptide uperin 3.5 is a cross-α/cross-β chameleon functional amyloid.

Nir SalinasEinav Tayeb-FligelmanMassimo D SammitoDaniel BlochRaz JelinekDror NoyIsabel UsónMeytal Landau
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2021)
Antimicrobial activity is being increasingly linked to amyloid fibril formation, suggesting physiological roles for some human amyloids, which have historically been viewed as strictly pathological agents. This work reports on formation of functional cross-α amyloid fibrils of the amphibian antimicrobial peptide uperin 3.5 at atomic resolution, an architecture initially discovered in the bacterial PSMα3 cytotoxin. The fibrils of uperin 3.5 and PSMα3 comprised antiparallel and parallel helical sheets, respectively, recapitulating properties of β-sheets. Uperin 3.5 demonstrated chameleon properties of a secondary structure switch, forming mostly cross-β fibrils in the absence of lipids. Uperin 3.5 helical fibril formation was largely induced by, and formed on, bacterial cells or membrane mimetics, and led to membrane damage and cell death. These findings suggest a regulation mechanism, which includes storage of inactive peptides as well as environmentally induced activation of uperin 3.5, via chameleon cross-α/β amyloid fibrils.
Keyphrases
  • cell death
  • endothelial cells
  • oxidative stress
  • induced apoptosis
  • high glucose
  • emergency department
  • diabetic rats
  • cell proliferation
  • fatty acid
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • drug induced