Litcius/Paper detail

Short Photoswitchable Antibacterial Peptides

Yuan Qi Yeoh, John R. Horsley, Jingxian Yu, Steven W. Polyak, Blagojce Jovcevski‬, Andrew D. Abell

2020ChemMedChem19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Three photoswitchable tetrapeptides, based on a known synthetic antibacterial, were designed and synthesized to determine activity against Staphylococcus aureus. Each peptide contains an azobenzene photoswitch incorporated into either the N-terminal side chain (1), C-terminal side chain (2), or the C-terminus (3) to allow reversible switching between cis- and trans-enriched photostationary states. Biological assays revealed that the C-terminus azobenzene (3) possessed the most potent antibacterial activity, with an MIC of 1 μg/mL. In this study, net positive charge, hydrophobicity, position of the azobenzene, secondary structure, and amphiphilicity were all found to contribute to antibacterial activity, with each of these factors likely facilitating the peptide to disrupt the negatively charged bacterial lipid membrane. Hence, these short photoswitchable antibacterial tetrapeptides provide insights for the future design and synthesis of antibiotics targeting S. aureus.

Topics & Concepts

AzobenzenePhotoswitchAntibacterial activityChemistryPeptideAntibacterial peptideSide chainAmphiphileStaphylococcus aureusStereochemistryCombinatorial chemistryBiochemistryBacteriaOrganic chemistryBiologyMoleculeCopolymerPolymerGeneticsPhotochromic and Fluorescence ChemistryPhotoreceptor and optogenetics researchSupramolecular Self-Assembly in Materials