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Enzymology and Protein Engineering

Mining and Statistical Modeling of Natural and Variant Class IIa Bacteriocins Elucidate Activity and Selectivity Profiles across Species

Daniel T. Tresnak, Benjamin J. Hackel
Isaac Cann, Editor
Daniel T. Tresnak
aDepartment of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota—Twin Cities, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
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Benjamin J. Hackel
aDepartment of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota—Twin Cities, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
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  • ORCID record for Benjamin J. Hackel
Isaac Cann
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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DOI: 10.1128/AEM.01646-20
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ABSTRACT

Class IIa bacteriocin antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are a compelling alternative to current antimicrobials because of potential specific activity toward antibiotic-resistant bacteria, including vancomycin-resistant enterococci. Engineering of these molecules would be enhanced by a better understanding of AMP sequence-activity relationships to improve efficacy in vivo and limit effects of off-target activity. Toward this goal, we experimentally evaluated 210 natural and variant class IIa bacteriocins for antimicrobial activity against six strains of enterococci. Inhibitory activity was ridge regressed to AMP sequence to predict performance, achieving an area under the curve of 0.70 and demonstrating the potential of statistical models for identifying and designing AMPs. Active AMPs were individually produced and evaluated against eight enterococcus strains and four Listeria strains to elucidate trends in susceptibility. It was determined that the mannose phosphotransferase system (manPTS) sequence is informative of susceptibility to class IIa bacteriocins, yet other factors, such as membrane composition, also contribute strongly to susceptibility. A broadly potent bacteriocin variant (lactocin DT1) from a Lactobacillus ruminis genome was identified as the only variant with inhibitory activity toward all tested strains, while a novel enterocin variant (DT2) from an Enterococcus faecium genome demonstrated specificity toward Listeria strains. Eight AMPs were evaluated for proteolytic stability to trypsin, chymotrypsin, and pepsin, and three C-terminal disulfide-containing variants, including divercin V41, were identified as compelling for future in vivo studies, given their high potency and proteolytic stability.

IMPORTANCE Class IIa bacteriocin antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), an alternative to traditional small-molecule antibiotics, are capable of selective activity toward various Gram-positive bacteria, limiting negative side effects associated with broad-spectrum activity. This selective activity is achieved through targeting of the mannose phosphotransferase system (manPTS) of a subset of Gram-positive bacteria, although factors affecting this mechanism are not entirely understood. Peptides identified from genomic data, as well as variants of previously characterized AMPs, can offer insight into how peptide sequence affects activity and selectivity. The experimental methods presented here identify promising potent and selective bacteriocins for further evaluation, highlight the potential of simple computational modeling for prediction of AMP performance, and demonstrate that factors beyond manPTS sequence affect bacterial susceptibility to class IIa bacteriocins.

FOOTNOTES

    • Received 7 July 2020.
    • Accepted 8 September 2020.
    • Accepted manuscript posted online 11 September 2020.
  • Supplemental material is available online only.

  • Copyright © 2020 American Society for Microbiology.

All Rights Reserved.

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Mining and Statistical Modeling of Natural and Variant Class IIa Bacteriocins Elucidate Activity and Selectivity Profiles across Species
Daniel T. Tresnak, Benjamin J. Hackel
Applied and Environmental Microbiology Oct 2020, 86 (22) e01646-20; DOI: 10.1128/AEM.01646-20

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Mining and Statistical Modeling of Natural and Variant Class IIa Bacteriocins Elucidate Activity and Selectivity Profiles across Species
Daniel T. Tresnak, Benjamin J. Hackel
Applied and Environmental Microbiology Oct 2020, 86 (22) e01646-20; DOI: 10.1128/AEM.01646-20
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KEYWORDS

class IIa bacteriocin
antimicrobial peptide
vancomycin-resistant enterococci
Listeria
protein design
mannose phosphotransferase system

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