High-Throughput Synthesis and Screening of Cyclic Peptide Antibiotics
- 1 June 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
- Vol. 50 (13), 3132-3137
- https://doi.org/10.1021/jm070282e
Abstract
Cyclic peptides are a rich source of biologically active compounds and are produced in nature by plants, bacteria, fungi, and lower sea animals. A high-throughput methodology has been developed for the combinatorial synthesis, screening, and identification of cyclic peptide natural product analogues with improved biological activities or useful new activities. The methodology was applied to generate a library of 1716 tyrocidine A analogues, which were screened for antibacterial activity in 96-well plates. The identity of the active peptides was determined by partial Edman degradation/mass spectrometry. This has resulted in the discovery of a series of tyrocidine analogues that have significantly improved therapeutic indices compared to the natural product. The availability of tyrocidine analogues with varying antibacterial activities has provided important insights into the structure−function relationship of tyrocidine A, which should help reveal its mechanism of action.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Combinatorial biosynthesis of novel antibiotics related to daptomycinProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Traceless Capping Agent for Peptide Sequencing by Partial Edman Degradation and Mass SpectrometryAnalytical Chemistry, 2006
- Recent Progress of the Synthetic Studies of Biologically Active Marine Cyclic Peptides and DepsipeptidesChemical Reviews, 2005
- N-Methylsansalvamide A Peptide Analogues. Potent New Antitumor AgentsJournal of Medicinal Chemistry, 2005
- A Chemoenzymatic Approach to Glycopeptide AntibioticsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2004
- Optimization of Antibacterial Cyclic DecapeptidesJournal of Combinatorial Chemistry, 2004
- DaptomycinNature Reviews Drug Discovery, 2003
- A Novel Peptide-Based Encoding System for “One-Bead One-Compound” Peptidomimetic and Small Molecule Combinatorial LibrariesJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2002
- A new type of synthetic peptide library for identifying ligand-binding activityNature, 1991
- Generation and use of synthetic peptide combinatorial libraries for basic research and drug discoveryNature, 1991