Worms’ Antimicrobial Peptides

Archive ouverte

Renato, Bruno | Maresca, Marc | Canaan, Stéphane | Cavalier, Jean-François | Mabrouk, Kamel | Boidin-Wichlacz, Céline | Olleik, Hamza | Zeppilli, Daniela | Brodin, Priscille | Massol, François | Jollivet, Didier | Jung, Sacha | Tasiemski, Aurélie

Edité par CCSD ; MDPI -

International audience. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are natural antibiotics produced by all living organisms. In metazoans, they act as host defense factors by eliminating microbial pathogens. But they also help to select the colonizing bacterial symbionts while coping with specific environmental challenges. Although many AMPs share common structural characteristics, for example having an overall size between 10-100 amino acids, a net positive charge, a γ-core motif, or a high content of cysteines, they greatly differ in coding sequences as a consequence of multiple parallel evolution in the face of pathogens. The majority of AMPs is specific of certain taxa or even typifying species. This is especially the case of annelids (ringed worms). Even in regions with extreme environmental conditions (polar, hydrothermal, abyssal, polluted, etc.), worms have colonized all habitats on Earth and dominated in biomass most of them while co-occurring with a large number and variety of bacteria. This review surveys the different structures and functions of AMPs that have been so far encountered in annelids and nematodes. It highlights the wide diversity of AMP primary structures and their originality that presumably mimics the highly diverse life styles and ecology of worms. From the unique system that represents marine annelids, we have studied the effect of abiotic pressures on the selection of AMPs and demonstrated the promising sources of antibiotics that they could constitute.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Promising antibacterial efficacy of arenicin peptides against the emerging opportunistic pathogen Mycobacterium abscessus

Archive ouverte | Casanova, Magali | CCSD

International audience. Mycobacterium abscessus , a fast-growing non-tuberculous mycobacterium, is an emerging opportunistic pathogen responsible for chronic bronchopulmonary infections in people with respiratory di...

The diversification of the antimicrobial peptides from marine worms is driven by environmental conditions

Archive ouverte | Bruno, Renato | CCSD

International audience. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) play a key role in the external immunity of animals, offering an interesting model for studying the influence of the environment on the diversification and evolu...

Potency of all-D amino acid antimicrobial peptides derived from the bovine rumen microbiome on tuberculous and non-tuberculous mycobacteria

Archive ouverte | Boidin-Wichlacz, Céline | CCSD

International audience. Despite the availability of antibiotics, tuberculosis (TB), caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, was once again declared the world's leading cause of death from a single infectious agent in ...

Chargement des enrichissements...