Istituto di Cristallografia - CNR

Cathelicidins—a rich seam of antimicrobial peptides waiting for exploitation

Cathelicidins are a ubiquitous family of host defence antimicrobial peptides in vertebrate animals. Unlike other antimicrobial peptide families, it is defined by a large and relatively well conserved proregion rather than by the mature bioactive peptides themselves, which are highly diverse and conform to at least five different structural types, resulting in distinct modes of action. Cathelicidin-derived host defence peptides have a pleiotropic role in immunity, displaying both a direct antimicrobial activity and the ability to boost other host responses to infection and injury. The presence of a relatively well conserved proregion attached to a vast repertoire of structurally and functionally diverse peptides allows mining the increasing number of vertebrate genomes for lead sequences to potentially useful new anti-infective and/or immunomodulatory agents. This should increase the number of cathelicidin-based peptides entering clinical trials, which has been limited to date, despite considerable efforts in the last 2 decades.

Anno
2024
Rivista
FRONTIERS IN DRUG DISCOVERY
Impact factor
not specified
AMBITI DI RICERCA
KEYWORDS
Autori
Tossi, Alessandro, Gerdol, Marco, Caporale, Andrea, Pacor, Sabrina, Mardirossian, Mario, Scocchi, Marco, Prickett, Michael D., Manzini, Giorgio, Gennaro, Renato
Autori IC CNR