1.C.115 The Membrane-permeabilizing Peptide, Atticin (Atticin) Family
Insects protect themselves against bacterial infection by secreting a battery of antimicrobial peptides into the hemolymph. The chemical synthesis and preliminary mechanistic investigation of diptericin, an 82 residue glycopeptide that contains regions similar to two different types of antibacterial peptides has been achieved (Winans et al. 1999).The full-length polypeptide was active in growth inhibition assays with an IC50 of approximately 250 nM, a concentration similar to that found in the insect hemolymph. Biological analysis of diptericin fragments indicated that the main determinant of antibacterial activity lay in the C-terminal region that is similar to the attacin peptides, although the N-terminal segment, related to the proline-rich family of antibacterial peptides, augmented that activity by 100-fold. Activity was glycosylation independent. Circular dichroism of unglycosylated diptericin indicated that the peptide lacked structure both in plain buffer and in the presence of liposomes. Diptericin increased the permeability of the outer and inner membranes of Escherichia coli D22 cells (Winans et al. 1999).
References:
Diptericin of 106 aas, Dpt or Dipt. Disrupts bacterial membranes (Winans et al. 1999). In the Pfam attacin superfamily.
Insects
Diptericin of Drosophila melanogaster (Fruit fly)
Diptericin-like peptide, Dpt, of 140 aas and 1 TMS.
Insects
Dpt homologue of Dendroctonus ponderosae (Mountain pine beetle)
Antimicrobial peptide of 181 aas
Insects
Peptide of Sitophilus zeamais (Maize weevil)
Attacin-2 of 166 aas
Insects (Animals)
Attacin2 of Microdera dzhungarica
Diptericin homologue of 93 aas, LmDpt
Insects (Animals)
Diptericin of Locusta migratoria manilensis (Oriental migratory locust)
Attacin-A of 224 aas, AttA
Insects (Animals)
AttA of Drosophila melanogaster (Fruit fly)