Journal Article10.1038/35086601
Antibacterial agents based on the cyclic D,L-alpha-peptide architecture
Sara Fernandez-Lopez,Hui-Sun Kim,Ellen C. Choi,Mercedes Delgado,Juan R. Granja,Juan R. Granja,Alisher Khasanov,Karin Kraehenbuehl,Georgina V. Long,Dana A. Weinberger,Keith M. Wilcoxen,M. Reza Ghadiri +11 more
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TL;DR: It is reported that six- and eight-residue cyclic d,l-α-peptides act preferentially on Gram-positive and/or Gram-negative bacterial membranes compared to mammalian cells, increase membrane permeability, collapse transmembrane ion potentials, and cause rapid cell death.
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Abstract: The rapid emergence of bacterial infections that are resistant to many drugs underscores the need for new therapeutic agents. Here we report that six- and eight-residue cyclic d,l-alpha-peptides act preferentially on Gram-positive and/or Gram-negative bacterial membranes compared to mammalian cells, increase membrane permeability, collapse transmembrane ion potentials, and cause rapid cell death. The effectiveness of this class of materials as selective antibacterial agents is highlighted by the high efficacy observed against lethal methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infections in mice. Cyclic d,l-alpha-peptides are proteolytically stable, easy to synthesize, and can be derived from a potentially vast membrane-active sequence space. The unique abiotic structure of the cyclic peptides and their quick bactericidal action may also contribute to limit temporal acquirement of drug resistant bacteria. The low molecular weight d,l-alpha-peptides offer an attractive complement to the current arsenal of naturally derived antibiotics, and hold considerable potential in combating a variety of existing and emerging infectious diseases.
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Citations
12 – Self-assembly of peptides and its potential application
S.Y. Fung,Y. Hong,Christine Keyes-Baig,P. Chen +3 more
- 01 Jan 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, molecular self-assembly is defined as the spontaneous organization of molecules under near thermodynamic equilibrium conditions into structurally well-defined and stable arrangements through non-covalent interactions such as hydrogen bonding, electrostatic attraction, and van der Walls interactions.
Peptide Nanomaterials for Drug Delivery Applications.
TL;DR: The types of self-assembling nanostructures, the effects of external stimuli on and the mechanisms behind the assembly process, and applications for such technology in drug delivery are explored.
Aggregation‐Induced Emission Featured Supramolecular Tubisomes for Imaging‐Guided Drug Delivery
TL;DR: A hierarchical self-assembly strategy of preparing cylindrical aggregates (tubisomes) from an amphiphilic supramolecular bottlebrush polymer in which a cyclic peptide nanotube is employed as the noncovalent backbone was reported in this paper .
Optically active macrocyclic hexaazapyridinophanes decorated at the periphery: synthesis and applications in the NMR enantiodiscrimination of carboxylic acids
Eduardo Busto,Almudena González-Álvarez,Vicente Gotor-Fernández,Ignacio Alfonso,Vicente Gotor +4 more
TL;DR: A family of pyridine based dialdehydes has been efficiently prepared starting from chelidamic acid by chemical modification of its 4-hydroxyl group as mentioned in this paper.
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