Journal article

Aggregation-prone antimicrobial peptides target gram-negative bacterial nucleic acids and protein synthesis

P Chen, T Zhang, C Li, P Praveen, K Parisi, C Beh, S Ding, JD Wade, Y Hong, S Li, JN Nkoh, A Hung, W Li, C Shang

Acta Biomaterialia | Published : 2025

Abstract

Aggregation of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) enhances their efficacy by destabilising the bacterial cell wall, membrane, and cytosolic proteins. Developing aggregation-prone AMPs offers a promising strategy to combat antibiotic resistance, though predicting such AMPs and understanding bacterial responses remain challenging. Octopus bimaculoides, a cephalopod species, lacks known AMP gene families, yet its protein fragments were used to predict AMPs via artificial intelligence tools. Four peptides (Oct-P1, Oct-P2, Oct-P3, and Oct-P4) were identified based on their aggregation propensity. Among them, Oct-P2 reduced the viability of Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus by up to 90 %, conf..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers