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Functional Structure/Activity Relationships
Yeast Surface Display of Antheraea pernyi Lysozyme Revealed #-helical Antibacterial Peptides in Its N-terminal Domain Sai Wen, Tongxin Mao, Dongmei Yao, Tian Li, and Fenghuan Wang J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b02489 • Publication Date (Web): 03 Aug 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on August 3, 2018
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Yeast Surface Display of Antheraea pernyi Lysozyme Revealed α-helical Antibacterial Peptides in Its N-terminal Domain Sai Wen, Tong-xin Mao, Dong-mei Yao, Tian Li and Feng-huan Wang* Beijing Higher Institution Engineering Research Center of Food Additives and Ingredients, School of Food and Chemical Engineering, Beijing Technology and Business University, Beijing, 100048, China
Corresponding Authors: Prof. Feng-huan Wang, e-mail address:
[email protected] ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
1
ABSTRACT:
2
The present study investigated a novel lysozyme ApLyz from the Chinese oak
3
silkmoth, Antheraea pernyi, for its active expression with N- or C-terminus fused to
4
the yeast cell surface, and the antimicrobial activities of the corresponding expressed
5
lysozymes were evaluated. The bactericidal activity of C-terminal fusion of ApLyz
6
surpassed that of the N-terminal fusion, which revealed the implication of N-terminal
7
stretch of ApLyz in the bactericidal fuction based on the structural mobility of this
8
region. Two N-terminal peptides of ApLyz (residues 1-15 and 1-32), which primarily
9
consist of amphiphilic α-helices, exerted similar bactericidal efficacy and had a strong
10
preference for the Gram-negative strains. Further investigation revealed that the
11
N-terminal peptides are membrane-targeting peptides causing cell permeabilization
12
and also possess non-membrane disturbing bactericidal mechanism. Overall, in
13
addition to the key findings of novel bactericidal peptides from silkmoth lysozyme,
14
this work laid the foundation for future improvement of ApLyz by protein
15
engineering.
16 17
KEYWORDS:
18
silkmoth lysozyme, yeast surface display, antimicrobial peptide, membrane
19
permeabilization
20 21 22
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INTRODUCTION
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Lysozyme (EC.3.2.1.17), coined by Alexander Fleming with the meaning of “an
25
enzyme that actually lyses bacteria”, is normally defined as a 1,4-β-d-N-acetyl
26
muramidase, given its ability to hydrolyze the glycosidic bond between the first
27
carbon of N-acetyl muramic acid and the fourth carbon of N-acetyl glucosamine in
28
peptidoglycans of the cell wall. Recent evidences have also revealed that lysozymes
29
possess some intriguing modes of action, such as perturbation of DNA or RNA
30
synthesis1, self-promoted uptake2, activation of bacterial autolysins3, participation in
31
digestion4, display of β-1,4-N,6-O-diacetyl muramidase activity5 or chitinase activity6.
32
As possibly the best-studied group of bacterial lytic hydrolases7-8, lysozyme has been
33
extensively investigated for food and pharmaceutical applications9-10, including food
34
additives in cheese making11, substitution for sulphite used in wines production12-13,
35
antifouling coatings for food package or implants14-15, preservatives in eye drops16,
36
active ingredient in toothpaste17-18 and treatment for enterotoxigenic E.coli-induced
37
diarrhea in young pigs19, etc.
38
While some lysozymes can be easily produced from egg-white or milk, the
39
construction of a recombinant over-expression system is essential, especially when
40
the lysozyme of interest is rare, or molecular engineering for structural or functional
41
investigations are required. When lysozyme is expressed in Escherichia coli, the
42
target protein remains in cells and is yielded as insoluble inclusion body with an extra
43
methionine residue at N-terminus, which reduces conformational stability and makes
44
the renaturation procedure indispensable20-21. On the other hand, yeast expression
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system, by taking advantages of soluble secretion, correct folding and comprehensive
46
post-transcriptional modifications of heterologous eukaryotic proteins, has been
47
proved to be a powerful tool for active expression of lysozymes from various sources,
48
such as egg white22-23, human24-25, silkmoth26 and marine invertebrates27. The yeast
49
surface display system is also an emerging technique for protein engineering and
50
screening, which can auto-immobilize proteins on the exterior of yeast cells. This
51
mechanism can endow the recombinant yeast with novel functions, taking lysozyme
52
expression for example, such as whole-cell biocatalyst for antifouling coating, a dual
53
purpose delivery vehicle of lysozyme and yeast for feed, and the screening platform
54
for novel lysozymes.
55
A drawback of natural lysozyme as antimicrobial agent is that the bactericidal activity
56
of lysozyme is directed against Gram-positive bacteria, and to a much less degree
57
against Gram-negative bacteria including foodborne pathogens. Over the past decades,
58
several researches have illustrated that, in addition to N-acetylmuramidase activity,
59
lysozymes can kill bacteria by non-catalytic action. It has been reported that heat
60
denaturation of lysozyme from chicken egg white enhanced bactericidal activity
61
towards Gram-negative bacteria of an enzymatically inactive, more cationic and
62
hydrophobic dimeric form28-30. Further studies on either genetically mutated lysozyme
63
devoid of muramidase activity or partially unfolded lysozyme suggested that the
64
antimicrobial action of lysozyme is due to structural factors rather than enzymatic
65
mechanism31-32. This observation, together with the results of proteolytic digestions
66
and three-dimensional (3D) structural analysis, suggested that lysozyme contains
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cationic and amphiphilic helix or helix hairpin motif that can promote self-uptake,
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insert into and form pores in negatively charged bacterial membranes33-36. The
69
identified antimicrobial peptides are mostly located in the terminal region of
70
lysozymes in favor of membrane penetration. So far, the nonenzymatic bactericidal
71
properties were found in c-type lysozymes, e.g., chicken-, human- and T4 phage
72
lysozymes37, and in g-type lysozyme from goose egg white38 as well as i-type
73
lysozyems like destabilase-lysozyme (DL)39. This distinct non-enzymatic antibacterial
74
feature of lysozyme is directly related to the killing of Gram-negative bacteria, and
75
thus herald attractive opportunities for developing novel broad-spectrum lysozymes or
76
derived peptides for food or therapeutic applications.
77
Insect lysozymes play a pivotal role in humoral immune response of insects to protect
78
them from a wide range of infectious microbes, and are therefore being increasingly
79
studied. In this study, a novel lepidopteran lysozyme from silkmoth Antheraea pernyi
80
was investigated for active expression and display with its N- or C-terminus tethered
81
to the yeast cell surface. This result of surface displayed A. pernyi lysozyme (ApLyz)
82
to exert antimicrobial potency has guiding significance for application of ApLyz in
83
immobilized form. The study also revealed that the N-terminal domain of ApLyz,
84
which primarily consisted of amphiphilic α-helical peptides, was implicated in the
85
bactericidal property of this lysozyme. In order to explore the structural requirements
86
and peptide-based bactericidal action of ApLyz, two N-terminal stretches of ApLyz
87
were
88
microorganisms, as well as membrane disturbing activity. The potential bactericidal
synthesized
and
tested
for
antimicrobial
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against
different
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mechanisms of ApLyz-derived peptides, their functional significance, and feasibility
90
for exploring novel antimicrobial peptides are discussed.
91 92
MATERIALS AND METHODS
93
Construction of recombinant plasmids expressing A. pernyi lysozyme with N- or
94
C-terminus fused to the surface anchor protein
95
The gene encoding mature peptide of A. pernyi lysozyme (aplyz, GenBank:
96
DQ353869.1) was initially identified by cDNA cloning from the hemolymph of the
97
silkworm, A. pernyi, upon Escherichia coli (E. coli) infection of the larvae. The aplyz
98
gene, which is 360 bp in length, and a novel, synthetic gene Raplyz encoding reversed
99
amino acid sequence of ApLyz were both artificially synthesized (Sangon Biotech Co.,
100
Shanghai, China). With regard to yeast surface display of N-terminal fused ApLyz,
101
aplyz gene was amplified by PCR and purified using an E.Z.N.A. Cycle Pure Kit
102
(Omega Bio-Tek, Inc., USA). The insert was subcloned into the yeast surface display
103
vector pYD1(Invitrogen, USA) between the EcoRI (NEB Biolabs, Schwalbach,
104
Germany) and XhoI (NEB) restriction sites to generate vecter pYD1-aplyz. Similarly,
105
as for the display of C-terminal fused ApLyz, Raplyz gene was subcloned into pYD1
106
between EcoRI and XhoI sites to generate vector pYD1-Raplyz. All PCR reactions
107
were performed in 100 µL reactions with high-fidelity DNA polymerase (NEB),
108
following the manufacturer’s protocol; an annealing temperature of 53℃ and
109
extension time of 30 s were used.
110
Yeast surface display of ApLyz with tethered N- or C-terminus
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The recombinant plasmids pYD1-aplyz and pYD1-Raplyz were respectively
112
transformed into S. cerevisiae EBY100 (Invitrogen, USA) following the instruction of
113
the pYD1 Yeast Display Vector Kit (Invitrogen, USA). The Minimal Dextrose
114
tryptophan-free Agar Plates comprising 6.7 g/L YNB without amino acids (BD Difco),
115
20 g/L glucose, 0.1 g/L leucine and 15 g/L agar were used to screen for positive
116
transformants. To induce cell surface protein expression, the positive clones harboring
117
pYD1-aplyz (designated as EBY100/pYD1-aplyz) or pYD1-Raplyz (designated as
118
EBY100/pYD1-Raplyz) were cultured in 10 mL YNB-CAA medium (6.7 g/L YNB, 5
119
g/L casamino acids) containing 20 g/L glucose at 30℃ until OD600 reached between 2
120
and 5. The yeast cells were harvested by centrifugation and resuspended in
121
YNB-CAA medium containing 20 g/L galactose to an OD600 between 0.5 and 1, then
122
cultivated at 20℃ with shaking for 48 hours for optimal expression of lysozyme.
123
Visualization of yeast surface displayed lysozyme and antibacterial activity assay
124
The yeast surface display of lysozyme was visualized through immunostaining using
125
fluorescent antibody and microscopy. The transformants of EBY100/pYD1-aplyz and
126
EBY100/pYD1-Raplyz were respectively harvested by centrifugation, washed with
127
1×sodium phosphate buffe (PBS), and then resuspend in 250 µl of 1×PBS, 1 mg/mL
128
BSA, and 1 µg Anti-Xpress antibody (Invitrogen, USA). The mixtures were chilled on
129
ice for 30 min and washed twice with 1×PBS. After being resuspended in 250 µl of
130
1×PBS, 1 mg/mL BSA and 1µg FITC-labeled Goat anti-mouse IgG (Beyotime
131
Biotech. Co., China), followed by incubation on ice for 30 min in dark with
132
occasional mixing, cells were washed and resuspended again with 1×PBS (W/O BSA),
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and visualized using a fluorescence microscope (Imager A1, Zeiss, Germany) with
134
FITC filter.
135
The activity of the ApLyz displayed on the yeast cell surface was assessed against
136
Microcococcus lysodeikticus by cylinder-plate method. The solid medium containing
137
30 mL YPD medium and 1.5 % (w/w) agar was inoculated with 0.25 mL overnight
138
cell culture of M. lysodeikticus before pouring into the Petri dishes. In each plate,
139
three stainless steel cylinders of uniform size were placed on the surface of the solid
140
medium and filled with 200 µL aliquot of cell culture from EBY00/pYD1,
141
EBY00/pYD1-aplyz and EBY00/pYD1-Raplyz, respectively. The plates were
142
incubated at 25℃ aerobically for 24 hours. The growth inhibition zone diameters
143
(mm) were carefully measured with a digital caliper.
144
Generation of Three-Dimensional (3D) Structures and peptide sequence analysis
145
BLAST search in PDB database showed that the amino acid sequence of ApLyz had
146
significant sequence similarity with lysozyme from tasar silkworm, Antheraea mylitta
147
(SMTL ID: 1iiz.1, 84% identity). 3D structures of ApLyz were generated by
148
homology modeling using SWISS-MODEL online service (http://swissmodel. expasy.
149
org), and presented by UCSF Chimera40. Sequence aligment analysis was performed
150
by
151
(http://espript.ibcp.fr/ESPript/cgi-bin/ESPript.cgi). Computation of the theoretical pI
152
(isoelectric point) and Mw (molecular weight) of the synthetic peptides was
153
performed on an ExPASy server, using Swiss-Prot sequence entries.
154
Antibacterial assay by viable count plating
ClustalX
and
visualized
by
the
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tool
Espript
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In brief, a single colony of bacteria was transferred into 50 mL of trypticase soy broth
156
(TSB) and incubated overnight at 37℃, diluted (1:50) in TBS and regrown at 37℃ to
157
logarithmic phase (1-4×108 cfu/mL). Bacteria were harvested, washed and
158
resuspended (106 cfu/mL) in 1×PBS. A 50 µL aliquot of the bacterial suspension was
159
mixed with 50 µL of water containing the test peptide at defined concentration, then
160
100 µL of 2% TSB in 1×PBS was added. The mixture was incubated at 37℃ for 1
161
hour, serially diluted in 1×PBS, and plated on TSB agar plates. Colony-forming units
162
were obtained after incubation of the plates at 37℃ for 24 hours. Assays were
163
performed in triplicate.
164
CD assay
165
The regular secondary structure content of two synthesized peptides were analyzed
166
using circular dichroism (CD). Ellipticity was scanned over 190~250 nm wavelength
167
on a Bio-Logic spectropolarimeter (Model MOS-500, France) where a concentration
168
of 0.5 mg/mL tested peptide in 0.1 cm path-length cuvette was used. The ellipticity
169
data
170
(http://cbdm-01.zdv.uni-mainz.de/~andrade/k2d3/) to approximate the secondary
171
structure content.
172
Live/dead viability assay
173
25 mL culture of tested strain were cultivated to late log phase as for viable count
174
plating, centrifuged and resuspended in 2 mL of 0.85% NaCl. A 1 mL aliquot of this
175
suspension was added to a centrifuge tube containing 20 mL of 0.85% NaCl and
176
incubated at room temperature for 1 hour, mixing every 15 min. Cells were washed
was
fitted
using
the
web
interface
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of
K2D3
program
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again and resuspended in 10 mL of 0.85% NaCl before staining. A 1:1 mixture of
178
SYTO 9 and propidium iodide (component A and B of the LIVE/DEAD BacLight
179
bacterial viability kit L7012, Molecular Probes, USA) was diluted by adding 3 µL of
180
the dye mixture to each milliliter of cell suspension. The bacterial suspension was
181
divided into three parts of 100 µL each for the addition of synthetic peptide α15 or
182
α32 in 20 µL PBS (200 µg/mL), respectively, or 20 µL PBS only as negative control.
183
2 hours after addition of the peptides or PBS, bacteria were examined separately
184
under a fluorescence microscope with FITC and Rhod bandpass filter set.
185 186
RESULTS
187
Yeast Surface Display of A. pernyi Lysozyme in N- or C-terminal Fusion
188
Constructs
189
Yeast surface display is a novel, cost-effective technique that can exhibit proteins on
190
the surface of yeast cells through a linkage with the surface anchor protein Aga2p, a
191
subunit of yeast mating protein a-agglutinin receptor41. In the most commonly used
192
configurations, the fusion of target protein with Aga2p is constructed at either N- or
193
C-terminus of the target protein42. Whether one side is more favorable for the
194
biological activity of the protein or not has to be evaluated for each fusion construct.
195
With regard to yeast surface display of ApLyz, the gene aplyz (GenBank:
196
DQ353869.1) was cloned into the expression vecter pYD1 in frame with the upstream
197
leader sequence encoding protein Aga2p, a Gly-Ser linker, and the XpressTM epitope.
198
In this way, the N-terminus of expressed ApLyz was fused to the C-terminus of Aga2p,
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allowing secretion and display on the cell surface of Saccharomyces cerevisiae
200
EBY100. The configuration of vector pYD1-aplyz was confirmed by double digestion
201
and DNA sequencing. As for the expression of ApLyz with its C-terminus fused to
202
Aga2p, a new DNA sequence encoding the reversed amino acid sequence of ApLyz
203
was synthesized and designated as Raplyz. The corresponding expression vector
204
pYD1-Raplyz was constructed and confirmed analogously.
205
The expression and display of fused ApLyz was induced by culturing recombinant S.
206
cerevisiae EBY100 with 20 g/L galactose as inducer for 48 hours and detected by
207
immunofluorescent staining which used anti-Xpress antibody as primary antibody and
208
FITC-labeled goat anti-mouse IgG (H+L) as secondary antibody. As shown in Figure
209
1A, the fluorescence of negtive control, i.e., EBY100 transformant of empty plasmid
210
pYD1, was barely detectable above background, while intense green fluorescence
211
were both observed on the yeast cells harboring pYD1-aplyz or pYD1-Raplyz,
212
indicating that these two display systems were capable for secretion and surface
213
display of lysozyme. Additionally, fluorescence intensity also illustrated that the N-
214
and C-terminal fusion of ApLyz lysozymes were displayed on the cell surface at a
215
similar level.
216 217
Antibacterial Activity Assay of Yeast Surface Displayed Lysozyme
218
Further analysis of antibacterial activity against Microcococcus lysodeikticus by
219
cylinder-plate method was taken to ascertain the impact of N- and C-terminal fusion
220
modes on the efficacy of displayed lysozymes. A 200 µL aliquot of fermentation broth
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was added into a cylinder and incubated at 20℃ for 24 hours. Formation of a growth
222
inhibition halo around the well readily indicated antimicrobial action of displayed
223
lysozymes. In contrast to fluorescence intensity, the resulting inhibition zones against
224
M. lysodeikticus showed that EBY100/pYD1-Raplyz exhibited higher antibacterial
225
activity than that of EBY100/pYD1-aplyz (Figure 1B), while EBY100/pYD1
226
presented no obvious activity (data not shown). This result revealed that
227
immobilization of the N-terminus of ApLyz had an adverse effect on the bactericidal
228
activity. Therefore, we speculated that the N-terminal domain of ApLyz was
229
implicated in the bactericidal function based on the structural mobility of this region.
230 231
Amphiphilic Peptides in the N-terminal Domain of ApLyz
232
To explore the N-terminal structure-activity relationship of ApLyz, the 3D structure of
233
ApLyz was generated through homology modeling with lysozyme from tasar
234
silkworm, Antheraea mylitta (SMTL ID: 1iiz.1, 100% coverage, 84% identity) as
235
template. As shown in Figure 2A, mature ApLyz contains four α-helices, designated
236
as H1 (residues Lys5-Gln15), H2 (residues Arg23-Glu32), H3 (residues Thr85-Arg97), and
237
H4 (residues Tyr104-Asn108), respectively, and two short double-stranded β-sheet
238
motifs. Catalytic residues of Glu32 and Asp50 are highly conserved in c-type
239
lysozymes and located between α-helices H2 and H3. Four pairs of disulfide bonds
240
are present between Cys6 and Cys120, Cys27 and Cys110, Cys62 and Cys76, and Cys72
241
and Cys90.
242
In the N-terminal domain of ApLyz, the remote H1 helix is rich in basic amino acids
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and exhibited +3 net positive charge at physiological pH. Corresponding helical wheel
244
projection and 3-D structure model showed that the hydrophobic residues were
245
mainly on one side of H1 helix, and polar residues were on the other side (Figure
246
2B-a).
247
(http://www.bioinformatics.nl/emboss-explorer/),
248
amphiphilic. Given that cationic and amphiphilic property is a common trait shared
249
amongst α-helical antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), we speculated that the stretch of
250
residues Lys1-Gln15 containing H1 helix might be similarly effective at conferring
251
antibacterial function.
252
Although the adjacent H2 helix was demonstrated to be an amphiphilic, but anionic
253
peptide (-2 net negative charge) (Figure 2B-b), we noted that H1 and H2 helices
254
together formed a helix-loop-helix motif (HLH, Lys1-Glu32) within the N-terminal
255
region of ApLyz. It is known that HLH structural motif is generally found in
256
DNA-binding proteins43 and membrane-active pore-forming proteins44-46. AMPs with
257
such a structure have been proved to be capable of forming channels through bacterial
258
membrane. For example, Cecropins B, the antimicrobial peptide present in the
259
silkmoth lymph after a bacterial infection, consists of two α-helices joined by a small
260
loop with membrane permeabilization action. The residues of N-terminal helix of
261
Cecropins B are cationic and hydrophobic, while the C-terminal helical residues are
262
primarily hydrophobic47-48. It is inferred that the N-terminal HLH motif of ApLyz
263
might also serve as a domain with antimicrobial function.
The
calculated
hydrophobic
moment
of
H1
helix
proving
this
peptide
264
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be
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Antimicrobial Activity Assay of Amphipathic Peptides
266
To test the structural requirements and hypothesized antimicrobial action of
267
N-terminal stretch of ApLyz, peptide α15 (residues 1-15, KWFTKCGLVHELRRQ)
268
and α32 (residues 1-32, KWFTKCGLVHELRRQGFDESLMRDWVCLVENE) were
269
synthesized and tested for bactericidal activity against two Gram-negative (E. coli and
270
K. pmeumonieae) and two Gram-positive (S. aureus and M. lysodeikticus) bacteria.
271
As shown in Figure 3, peptide α15 and α32 were both effective against all tested
272
strains, whereas their bactericidal activity against S. aureus are much weaker than that
273
against three other strains. Bactericidal activity curves of peptide α15 and α32
274
presented analogous trends of dose-dependent activity suggesting they have similar
275
bactericidal potency, except for peptide α15 being more efficient than α32 in killing of
276
M. lysodeikticus. Overall, the Gram-negtive strains, E. coli and K. pmeumonieae, are
277
more sensitive to the bactericidal action of ApLyz-derived peptides than
278
Gram-positive ones, S. aureus and M. lysodeikticus. In contrast, the full lysozyme
279
ApLyz showed an extremely low activity against E. coli according to agar diffusion
280
assay (data not shown), while it exerted superior activity against M. lysodeikticus.
281
Furthermore, to examine whether the tested ApLyz-derived peptides possess
282
native-like α-helical structures, circular dichroism spectroscopy (CD) was used to
283
investigate the respective secondary structure of peptide α15 and α32 in aqueous
284
solution (Figure 4). Secondary structure analysis, which was performed using an
285
online secondary structure estimation program K2D349, indicated that both peptides
286
were composed primarily of α-helices: an estimate of 80% and 95% of α-helical
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content in α15 and α32, respectively, with the rest mostly random coils. In addition,
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the unstructured sequences of peptides may well form helical structure upon
289
membrane-interaction, given that lipid membranes manifest a diverse array of surface
290
forces which can orient and fold an approaching antimicrobial peptide50. In summary,
291
the tested peptides exhibit basically the same secondary structure in the N-terminus of
292
ApLyz.
293 294
Membrane disturbing activity assay of Amphipathic Peptides
295
In light of the known bactericidal fuction of AMPs which primarily correlates to
296
membrane binding and pore-forming, the N-terminal peptides α15 and α32 were used
297
in LIVE/DEAD Baclight assays for a direct proof of membrane disturbing action. In
298
this system, the green-fluorescent nucleic acid stain SYTO 9 alone labels all bacteria
299
regardless of cell membrane integrity, while the red-fluorescent nucleic acid stain
300
propidium iodide (PI) penetrates only bacteria with damaged membranes, causing a
301
reduction in the SYTO 9 stain fluorescence when both dyes are present.
302
Late log phase cultures of E. coli, K. pmeumonieae, M. lysodeikticus and S. aureus
303
were treated with α15 or α32 peptides at a concertration of 200 µg/mL, respectively.
304
After 2 hours of incubation, the dye mixture was added for staining live/dead cells,
305
where bacteria with intact cell membranes stain fluorescent green and damaged
306
membranes stain fluorescent red. Although some cells were already dead before
307
staining, remarkable increases in the population of cells staining red after peptide
308
treatment were readily observed, indicating reduced viability of cells due to
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peptide-induced membrane permeabilization (Figure 5). In the cases of E. coli, M.
310
lysodeikticus and S. aureus, fluorescent results from LIVE/DEAD Baclight assay
311
paralleled the bactericidal activity tests of α15 and α32 peptides, whereas the
312
membrane damage induced by two peptides in Gram-negative K. pmeumonieae was
313
marginal, which is not aligned with their bactericidal potencies against this strain
314
(Figure 3). A possible explanation for this phenomenon is that ApLyz-derived
315
N-terminal peptides kill K. pmeumonieae either by forming metastable and restorable
316
pores in cell membrane51-52, followed by the exertion of intracellular bactericidal
317
effects53-54, or through distinct mechanisms like the blockage of proton-motive force
318
(respiration) by dissipating the transmembrane electrical potential gradient33. Overall,
319
the data presented bring forth a conclusion that the antimicrobial function of
320
lysozyme-derived peptide is a concerted process involving multiple killing
321
mechenisms.
322 323
DISCUSSION
324
Antimicrobial enzymes, especially lysozyme, has emerged as favorable alternative to
325
create bacteria-resistant surfaces of both food equipment and packaging materials that
326
are proposed to prevent cross-contamination, inhibit biofilm formation, and increase
327
commodity shelf life55-57. However, the prerequisite for developing lysozyme-based
328
antimicrobial material is to immobilize the protein on the packing matrix without
329
compromising its activity. Therefore, it is important to ascertain the effect of
330
immobilization pattern on the functionality of lysozyme that correlates primarily to
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the structure-activity relationship.
332
In
333
surface-immobilization of silkmoth lysozyme ApLyz on the exterior of S. cerevisiae
334
cells. S. cerevisiae has long been an efficient cell factory for the expression of
335
eukaryotic proteins and can perform complex post-translational modifications, such as
336
glycosylation, disulfide formation, phosphorylation and acylation. For glycoproteins,
337
however, S. cerevisiae typically produces high-mannose type glycan stretches, which
338
can be antigenic for recombinant mammalian proteins58. Nonetheless, the
339
glycosylation pathway in yeast is similar with that of the insect, by which
340
glycoproteins are modified with heterogeneous mannose-type N-glycan structures59.
341
In particular, the yeast and insect systems have identical steps of glycosylation in the
342
endoplasmic reticulum (ER), which are proved to be intimately coupled with the
343
quality control of protein folding60. In this context, yeast expression system can
344
potentially yield correctly folded insect lysozyme ApLyz and minimize the negative
345
impact of yeast glycosylation on its bioactivity. By using yeast display system, the
346
impact of N- or C-terminal fusion mode on the bactericidal activity of ApLyz was
347
explored. It was shown that the N- and C-terminal fusions of lysozyme both exerted
348
potent antibacterial activities against the tested strain; this is particularly advantageous
349
because it holds promise for ApLyz as active antimicrobial agent for immobilization
350
on the surfaces of food packaging materials or implants.
351
Furthermore, we found that the C-terminal tethered ApLyz exhibited higher
352
bactericidal activity than that of the N-terminal tethered ApLyz. A rational explanation
this
research,
we
investigated
the
heterologous
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and
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is that the N-terminal domain is directly implicated in the bactericidal function of
354
ApLyz based on the structural mobility of this region. In light of the simulated
355
structure of ApLyz, its N-terminal domain primarily consists of two α-helices (i.e., H1
356
and H2), which are joined to form a typical helix-loop-helix structure (HLH). In
357
particular, the H1 α-helix is rich of basic and hydrophobic residues, and adopts an
358
amphiphilic secondary structure resembling the typical cationic antimicrobial peptides
359
(AMPs). Accumulating findings indicated that the cationic host-defense AMPs can
360
fold into amphiphilic structure by interaction with membranes and subsequently
361
induce permeabilization61. We speculated that the innate cationic and amphiphilic
362
peptides present at the terminal stretch of lysozyme, as well as surface-exposed, are in
363
favor of membrane binding and penetration. This is in line with previous reports of
364
the identified antimicrobial peptides mostly resided in the terminal region of
365
lysozymes. Besides antimicrobial peptides found in N-terminus, the C-terminal
366
peptide stretches in human (residues 87-115) and chicken lysozyme (residues 87-114)
367
have also been identified to possess in vitro bactericidal activity62-63. Given the
368
structural similarity of these c-type lysozymes, it can be inferred that the C-terminal
369
stretch of ApLyz, which mainly consist of α-helices, might also serve as an
370
antimicrobial domain. Nonetheless, as shown in our experiment, the effect of
371
immobilization of C-terminus of ApLyz on the bactericidal activity of ApLyz was
372
inferior to that of the N-terminal fusion, and therefore, the functional significance of
373
C-terminal peptides awaits further investigation.
374
In order to unravel the functional significance of N-terminal α-helical peptide motifs
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of ApLyz, peptide α15 and α32 were synthesized and tested for antimicrobial activity
376
against Gram-negative and Gram-positive strains. As expected, the viable cell counts
377
showed that α15 and α32 peptides were both effective, to different extents, in the
378
killing of tested bacteria and displayed highest antibacterial activity toward
379
Gram-negative bacteria, which compensates for the weakness of parent lysozyme
380
ApLyz in this aspect. Furthermore, CD spectra of these two peptides in aqueous
381
solution manifested that the predominant structures of them are α-helices, which is
382
essentially the same with the N-terminal domain in ApLyz. Given the inconsistency
383
between the pI values of peptide α15 ( pI=10.05 ) and α32 ( pI=5.62 ), we inferred
384
that the structural factor, rather than cationicity, is mostly responsible for
385
antimicrobial function of the N-terminal domain of ApLyz.
386
The hypothesized membrane permeabilization mechanism of ApLyz-derived peptides
387
was strongly reinforced by the results of fluorescence staining assays which clearly
388
demonstrated a membrane perturbing activity of both α15 and α32 peptides. However,
389
a lack of correlation between membrane permeabilization and antibacterial activity of
390
these peptides against K. pmeumonieae was observed, similar to the results of buforin
391
II64 and indolicidin65. These findings suggested that multiple bactericidal mechanisms
392
of membrane- and non-membrane permeabilizing modes are adopted by antimicrobial
393
peptides, of which the predominant mechanism is target strain-specific and might
394
prove an important area for indepth research.
395
Comparing with intensively studied human- and chicken lysozyme, the amino acid
396
sequence identity between ApLyz and these two c-type lysozymes are relatively low
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(37%, 39%) (Figure 6), and the N-terminal α-helical peptides derived from respective
398
lysozymes differ in their bactericidal performance33, 35, 62. The sequence diversity of
399
homologous lysozymes contribute to the diverse antimicrobial actions. For instance,
400
some lysozyme-like proteins from silkmoth, having 50-60% protein sequence
401
homology with the silkmoth lysozyme, were recently identified to possess remarkable
402
bacteriostatic rather than bactericidal activity against both Gram-negative and
403
Gram-positive bacteria, but lack of peptidoglycan hydrolysis ability66. Additionally, it
404
was reported that even single amino acid substitution either in hinge or α-helical
405
region of natural or lysozyme-derived antimicrobial peptide can affect the
406
antimicrobial mechanism dramaticlly63, 67. Therefore, lysozyme-derived peptides from
407
different origins furnish a promising source of natural antimicrobial peptides for food,
408
fodder and pharmaceutical applications.
409
In summary, this study demonstrated the presence of a new class of potent bactericidal
410
peptides found in the N-terminal domain of silkmoth lysozyme ApLyz and enabled
411
the selection of novel antimicrobial peptides to complement conventional antibiotics
412
for enhanced food safety and hygiene. Moreover, the discovery of non-catalytic
413
antimicrobial motif of ApLyz, together with the established yeast surface display
414
system, opened up an opportunity for future improvement of lysozyme in bactericidal
415
efficacy, especially against Gram-negtive strains, by high-throughput screening of
416
corresponding mutant library.
417 418
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AUTHOR INFORMATION
420
Conflict of interest
421
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
422
Funding
423
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No.
424
21406005); the Scientific Research Starting Foundation for Young Talents in Beijing
425
Technology and Business University (No. QNJJ2014-28).
426 427
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
428
We want to acknowledge Prof. Fan, Li-hai for providing yeast strain and plasmid in
429
the experiment of yeast surface display.
430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449
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Figure captions
617
Figure 1. (A) Bright field (upper panel) and immunofluorescence (bottom panel)
618
microscopic images of EBY100 (a-b), EBY100/pYD1-LYZ (c-d) and
619
EBY100/pYD1-RPLYZ (e-f) staining with anti-Xpress-FITC antibodies.
620
Antimicrobial activity of yeast surface displayed lysozymes LYZ and RPLYZ against
621
M. lysodeikticus using the cylinder-plate method (inhibition zone). Experiments were
622
carried out in triplicate, and values were shown as means ± S.D. “**”(p< 0.01)
623
indicates significant difference obtained from the Student’s t test.
(B)
624 625
Figure 2. (A) Schematic representation of 3-D structure of ApLyz based on homology
626
modeling. The HLH α-helical motif (boxed, dashed line) is located at the upper side
627
of the active site cleft. The two catalytic residues (Glu32 and Asp50) and four
628
disulfide bonds are shown. (B) Helical wheel projections of H1(a) and H2(b)
629
α-helices (http://rzlab.ucr.edu/scripts/wheel). By default the output presents the
630
hydrophilic residues as circles, hydrophobic residues as diamonds, potentially
631
negatively charged as triangles, and potentially positively charged as pentagons.
632
Hydrophobicity is color coded as well: the most hydrophobic residue is green, and the
633
amount of green is decreasing proportionally to the hydrophobicity, with zero
634
hydrophobicity coded as yellow. Hydrophilic residues are coded red with pure red
635
being the most hydrophilic (uncharged) residue, and the amount of red decreasing
636
proportionally to the hydrophilicity. The potentially charged residues are light blue.
637
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Figure 3 Bactericidal activity of synthesized α15 and α32 peptides against
639
Gram-negtive strains, E. coli and K. pmeumonieae, and Gram-positive strains, M.
640
lysodeikticus and S. aureus. The colony forming unit (CFU) was counted to determine
641
the number of viable cells after incubation with different concentrations (50-250
642
µg/mL) of α15 or α32 peptides for 1 h. Values represent the means ± S.D. of three
643
independent experiments.
644
Circular dichroism spectra of α15 and α32 peptide. Mean residue
645
Figure 4
646
ellipticity has units of deg.cm2dmol-1.
647
Membrane disturbing activity of synthesized α15 and α32 peptide.
648
Figure 5
649
LIVE/DEAD staining of cells followed the incubation with α15 or α32 at a final
650
concentration of 200 µg/mL for 120 min. For four types of bacterial cells, left: PBS
651
control, center: α15 peptide, right: α32 peptide. Bacterial cells with damaged
652
membranes fluoresce red; bacteria with intact membranes fluoresce green.
653
Multiple sequence alignment of lysozymes from human (PDB ID: 1lz1),
654
Figure 6
655
hen egg white (PDB ID: 1dpx) and A. perni (GenBank: ABC73705.1). Gaps are
656
indicated by “.”. Secondary structure elements are shown at the top. Sequence
657
alignment was carried out by clustalW and visualized using ESPript3.0 .
658
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Figure 1
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Figure 3
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Figure 4
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Figure 5
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Figure 6
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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ACS Paragon Plus Environment