抗菌肽
细菌
抗菌剂
化学
肽
膜
抗生素
生物化学
作用机理
细菌细胞结构
行动方式
细胞膜
生物物理学
革兰氏阴性菌
肽序列
大肠杆菌
生物
体外
有机化学
基因
遗传学
出处
期刊:Biopolymers
[Wiley]
日期:2002-01-01
卷期号:66 (4): 236-248
被引量:1494
摘要
Abstract Water‐membrane soluble protein and peptide toxins are used in the defense and offense systems of all organisms, including plants and humans. A major group includes antimicrobial peptides, which serve as a nonspecific defense system that complements the highly specific cell‐mediated immune response. The increasing resistance of bacteria to conventional antibiotics stimulated the isolation and characterization of many antimicrobial peptides for potential use as new target antibiotics. The finding of thousands of antimicrobial peptides with variable lengths and sequences, all of which are active at similar concentrations, suggests a general mechanism for killing bacteria rather than a specific mechanism that requires preferred active structures. Such a mechanism is in agreement with the “carpet model” that does not require any specific structure or sequence. It seems that when there is an appropriate balance between hydrophobicity and a net positive charge the peptides are active on bacteria. However, selective activity depends also on other parameters, such as the volume of the molecule, its structure, and its oligomeric state in solution and membranes. Further, although many studies support that bacterial membrane damage is a lethal event for bacteria, other studies point to a multihit mechanism in which the peptide binds to several targets in the cytoplasmic region of the bacteria.
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