Pavel V. Panteleev
Russian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by Pavel V. Panteleev.
Journal of Peptide Science | 2015
Pavel V. Panteleev; Ilia A. Bolosov; Sergey V. Balandin; Tatiana V. Ovchinnikova
β‐Hairpin antimicrobial peptides are among the most potent peptide antibiotics of animal origin. Arenicins, isolated earlier from marine polychaeta lugworm Arenicola marina, belong to a family of β‐hairpin antimicrobial peptides and display a broad spectrum of biological activities. However, despite being potent antimicrobials, arenicins are partially unapplicable as therapeutics as a result of their relatively high cytotoxicity against mammalian cells. In this study, a template‐based approach was used to create therapeutically valuable analogs of arenicin‐1 and identify amino acid residues important for antibacterial and cytotoxic activities of the peptide. The plasmids encoding recombinant analogs were constructed by mutagenesis technique based on inverse PCR amplification of the whole arenicin‐1 expression plasmid. The analogs were produced as a part of the fusion proteins in Escherichia coli. It was shown that an obvious reduction in hemolytic activity without lose of antimicrobial activity can be achieved by a single amino acid substitution in the non‐polar face of the molecule with hydrophilic residues such as serine and arginine. As the result, the selective analog with 50‐fold improved therapeutic index was developed. The circular dichroism spectra demonstrated that the secondary structure of the analog was similar to the natural arenicin‐1 in water solution and sodium dodecyl sulfate micelles but significantly differed in the presence of dodecylphosphocholine micelles mimicking mammalian membranes. Similarly to arenicin‐1, the designed analog killed bacteria via induction of the membrane damage, assessed using the fluorescent dye SYTOX Green uptake. Our results afford molecular insight into mechanism of antimicrobial action of the designed arenicin analogs and their possible clinical application. Copyright
Biotechnology and Applied Biochemistry | 2017
Pavel V. Panteleev; Tatiana V. Ovchinnikova
Here, we report an efficient procedure for recombinant production and purification of tachyplesin I (THI) with a final yield of 17 mg/L of the culture medium. The peptide was expressed in Escherichia coli as a part of the thioredoxin fusion protein. With the use of soluble expression followed by immobilized metal–ion affinity chromatography, the recombinant protein cleavage and reversed‐phase high‐performance liquid chromatography, a yield of THI did not exceed 6.5 mg/L of the culture medium. Further optimization studies were carried out to improve the protein expression level and simplify purification procedure of the target peptide. To achieve better yield of the peptide, we used high‐cell‐density bacterial expression. The formed inclusion bodies were highly enriched with the fusion protein, which allowed us to perform direct chemical cleavage of the inclusion bodies solubilized in 6 M guanidine–HCl with subsequent selective precipitation of proteins with trifluoroacetic acid. This enabled us to avoid an extra step of purification by immobilized metal–ion affinity chromatography. The developed procedure has made it possible to obtain biologically active THI and was used for screening a number of its mutant analogs. As a result, several selective and nonhemolytic analogs were developed. Significant reduction in hemolytic activity without losing antimicrobial activity was achieved by substitution of tyrosine or isoleucine residue in the β‐turn region of the molecule with hydrophilic serine. The present study affords further insight into molecular mechanism of antimicrobial action of tachyplesin and gains a better understanding of structure–activity relationships in its analogs. This is aimed at searching for novel antibiotics on the basis of antimicrobial peptides with reduced cytotoxicity.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2017
Pavel V. Panteleev; Mikhail Yu. Myshkin; Zakhar O. Shenkarev; Tatiana V. Ovchinnikova
The β-hairpin antimicrobial peptides arenicins from marine polychaeta Arenicola marina exhibit a broad spectrum of antimicrobial activity and high cytotoxicity. In this study the biological activities of arenicin-1 and its therapeutically valuable analog Ar-1[V8R] were investigated. The peptide Ar-1[V8R] displays significantly reduced cytotoxicity against mammalian cells relative to the wild-type arenicin-1. At the same time, both peptides exhibit similar antibacterial activities and kinetics of bacterial membrane permeabilization. Comparative NMR analysis of the peptides spatial structures in water and membrane-mimicking environment showed that Ar-1[V8R] in contrast to arenicin has significantly lower dimerization propensity. Thus, dimerization of the antimicrobial peptide arenicin plays a key role in the cytotoxicity but not in the antibacterial activity.
Journal of Peptide Science | 2016
Pavel V. Panteleev; Ilia A. Bolosov; Tatiana V. Ovchinnikova
New bioengineering approaches are required for development of more active and less toxic antimicrobial peptides. In this study we used β‐hairpin antimicrobial peptide arenicin‐1 as a template for design of more potent antimicrobials. In particular, six shortened 17‐residue analogs were obtained by recombinant expression in Escherichia coli. Besides, we have introduced the second disulfide bridge by analogy with the structure of tachyplesins. As a result, a number of analogs with enhanced activity and cell selectivity were developed. In comparison with arenicin‐1, which acts on cell membranes with low selectivity, the most potent and promising its analog termed ALP1 possessed two‐fold higher antibacterial activity and did not affect viability of mammalian cells at concentration up to 50 μM. The therapeutic index of ALP1 against both Gram‐positive and Gram‐negative bacteria was significantly increased compared with that of arenicin‐1 while the mechanism of action remained the same. Like arenicin‐1, the analog rapidly disrupt membranes of both stationary and exponential phase bacterial cells and effectively kills multidrug‐resistant Gram‐negative bacteria. Furthermore, ALP1 was shown to bind DNA in vitro at a ratio of 1:1 (w/w). The circular dichroism spectra demonstrated that secondary structures of the shortened analogs were similar to that of arenicin‐1 in water solution, but significantly differed in membrane‐mimicking environments. This work shows that a strand length is one of the key parameters affecting cell selectivity of β‐hairpin antimicrobial peptides. Copyright
Journal of Peptide Science | 2015
Sergei V. Sychev; Sergey V. Balandin; Pavel V. Panteleev; Leonid I. Barsukov; Tatiana V. Ovchinnikova
This work presents a comparative study of proton transfer activity (PTA) of two cationic (+6) antimicrobial peptides, β‐structural arenicin‐2 and α‐helical melittin. A new approach was proposed for the detection of passive proton transfer by using proteoliposomes containing bacteriorhodopsin, which creates a small light‐induced electrochemical proton gradient ∆ΔpH. Addition of several nanomoles of the peptides lowers ∆ΔpH that is proximately indicative of the pore formation. The quantitative analysis of sigmoidal dependences of ∆pH on the peptides concentration was carried out using liposomes prepared from PC, PC/PE, PC/PE/PI and PC/PG. Substitution of PC‐containing liposomes with PE‐containing ones, having negative spontaneous curvature, reduced the PTA of α‐helical melittin and increased that of β‐structural arenicin‐2. This result indicates an essential difference in the pore formation by these peptides. Further increase of PTA in response to arenicin‐2 (in contrast to melittin) was observed in the liposomes prepared from PC/PE/PI. The data analysis leads to the conclusion that PTA is influenced by (i) efficiency of the pore assemblage, which depends on the structure of pore‐forming peptides, and the spontaneous curvature of lipids and (ii) the presence of mobile protons in the polar head groups of phospholipids. Copyright
Chemical Biology & Drug Design | 2018
Denis Kuzmin; Anna A. Emelianova; Mariana B. Kalashnikova; Pavel V. Panteleev; Sergey V. Balandin; Ekaterina O. Serebrovskaya; Oksana Yu. Belogurova‐Ovchinnikova; Tatiana V. Ovchinnikova
Natural antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are important components of the innate immune system with a wide spectrum of biological activity. In this study, we investigated the cytotoxic effect of three recombinant β‐hairpin cationic AMPs: arenicin‐1 from the polychaeta Arenicola marina, tachyplesin I from the horseshoe crab Tachypleus tridentatus, and gomesin from the spider Acanthoscurria gomesiana. All the three β‐hairpin AMPs were overexpressed in Escherichia coli. Different cell lines were incubated with various concentrations of the investigated AMPs in order to evaluate their cytotoxic activity. Double staining with subsequent flow cytometric analysis was used to determine the predominant way of cell death mediated by each AMP. Hemolytic activity of the peptides was tested against fresh human red blood cells. Our results indicated that all the three AMPs exhibited significant cytotoxic effect against cancer cells that varied depending on the cell line type and, in most cases, on the presence of serum components. Flow cytometric analysis implicitly indicated that tachyplesin I mostly promoted late apoptosis/necrosis, while arenicin‐1 and gomesin induced early apoptosis under the same conditions. Tachyplesin I proved to be the most promising therapeutic candidate as it displayed the highest specific cytotoxicity against cancer cell lines, independent of the serum presence.
Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2017
Pavel V. Panteleev; Sergey V. Balandin; Vadim T. Ivanov; Tatiana V. Ovchinnikova
Endogenous antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are evolutionary ancient molecular factors of innate immunity that play the key role in host defense. Because of the low resistance rate, AMPs have caught extensive attention as possible alternatives to conventional antibiotics. Over the last years, it has become evident that biological functions of AMPs are beyond direct killing of microbial cells. This review focuses on a relatively small family of animal host defense peptides with the β-hairpin structure stabilized by disulfide bridges. Their small size, rigid structure, stability to proteases, and plethora of biological functions, including antibacterial, antifungal, antiviral, anticancer, endotoxin-binding, metabolism- and immune- modulating activities, make natural β-hairpin AMPs an attractive molecular basis for drug design.
Russian Journal of Bioorganic Chemistry | 2017
Sergei V. Sychev; Pavel V. Panteleev; T. V. Ovchinnikova
Arenicin-2 is a 21-residue β-hairpin antimicrobial peptide isolated from the marine lugworm Arenicola marina. The structure of this cationic peptide in partly charged lipid membrane made of PC/PG (7: 3) was studied by FTIR, CD, and Trp fluorescence spectroscopies. FTIR spectra of arenicin in amide I region were analyzed using curve-fitting and second derivative procedures. The FTIR data for the peptide in PC/PG liposomes were compared with the data obtained in anionic SDS micelles where arenicin forms a dimer stabilized by parallel association of two β-hairpins according to previous NMR spectroscopy studies [Ovchinnikova et al., Biopolymers, 2007, vol. 89, pp. 455–464; Shenkarev et al., Biochemistry, 2011, vol. 50, pp. 6255–6265]. The results obtained in present work indicate that arenicin forms the dimeric structure in partly charged PC/PG lipid membrane. This finding is discussed in relation to interpretation of low-conducting pores observed for arenicin in negatively charged membranes.
Pharmaceutical Chemistry Journal | 2017
Pavel V. Panteleev; Sergey V. Balandin; T. V. Ovchinnikova
The spread of bacterial strains with multiple drug resistance to various classes of antibiotics is a key problem of modern medicine. The ability of bacteria to form biofilms is an important factor of their drug resistance. Therefore, new antimicrobial compounds that act efficaciously against pathogenic bacteria regardless of their metabolic activity, physiological properties, and localization must be discovered. Cationic antimicrobial peptides (AMP) are especially interesting among such compounds. The goal of the present work was to study the anti-biofilm activity of arenicin-1 and its therapeutically valuable analog V8R prepared previously by us as compared with several known β-hairpin AMP of animal origin. A number of β-hairpin AMP at micromolar concentrations suppressed completely not only planktonic growth but also biofilm formation by Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 and also killed bacteria within the biofilms and caused their degradation.
Marine Drugs | 2018
Pavel V. Panteleev; Andrey Tsarev; Ilia A. Bolosov; Alexander S. Paramonov; Mariana Marggraf; Sergey Sychev; Zakhar O. Shenkarev; Tatiana V. Ovchinnikova
Endogenous antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are among the earliest molecular factors in the evolution of animal innate immunity. In this study, novel AMPs named nicomicins were identified in the small marine polychaeta Nicomache minor in the Maldanidae family. Full-length mRNA sequences encoded 239-residue prepropeptides consisting of a putative signal sequence region, the BRICHOS domain within an acidic proregion, and 33-residue mature cationic peptides. Nicomicin-1 was expressed in the bacterial system, and its spatial structure was analyzed by circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Nicomicins are unique among polychaeta AMPs scaffolds, combining an amphipathic N-terminal α-helix and C-terminal extended part with a six-residue loop stabilized by a disulfide bridge. This structural arrangement resembles the Rana-box motif observed in the α-helical host-defense peptides isolated from frog skin. Nicomicin-1 exhibited strong in vitro antimicrobial activity against Gram-positive bacteria at submicromolar concentrations. The main mechanism of nicomicin-1 action is based on membrane damage but not on the inhibition of bacterial translation. The peptide possessed cytotoxicity against cancer and normal adherent cells as well as toward human erythrocytes.