Identification Of A Novel Histone Derived Antimicrobial Peptide In Airway Surface Liquid.

The airway surface liquid (ASL), a protective layer secreted by the airway epithelium, represents the first line of defence against inhaled infectious material. It contains a complex array of secreted proteins and peptides that aid the neutralisation and removal of inhaled microbes and toxicants. Th...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The FASEB Journal
Main Authors: Biggart, Matthew Guy Stevenson, Ling, Xie, Simpson, Nathan, Gani, Jurnorain, Wrobel, John, Hilpert, Kai, Chen, Xian, Tarran, Robert, Baines, Deborah
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1096/fasebj.2020.34.s1.02889
Description
Summary:The airway surface liquid (ASL), a protective layer secreted by the airway epithelium, represents the first line of defence against inhaled infectious material. It contains a complex array of secreted proteins and peptides that aid the neutralisation and removal of inhaled microbes and toxicants. The ASL also contains many proteases that can cleave proteins to generate further bioactive peptides. We therefore hypothesised that the airway ASL sustained an extensive peptidome containing novel bioactive peptides. We examined the ASL peptide profile of normal human bronchial epithelial cells transformed with BMI‐1 (NHBE‐BMI1) and cell‐lines Calu3 (submucosal adenocarcinoma) and H441 (Clara cell like adenocarcinoma). ASL was acquired by washing the apical surface of epithelial monolayers grown at air‐liquid interface with PBS (100μl) at 0, 24 and 120 hours after exposure to hyperglycaemic (25mM glucose) or normoglycaemic (5mM glucose and 20mM mannitol) basolateral medium. The ASL peptides < 10kDa, were subsequently isolated and analysed using the Q Exactive™ HF‐X Hybrid Quadrupole‐Orbitrap™ Mass Spectrometer. The resulting spectra of native peptides and their subsequent fragments were analysed using the pNovo De novo sequencing tool. Our preliminary results identified 4765 unique peptides (NHBE‐BMI1: 646, Calu3: 3150, H441: 1197). Of these, 37 peptides were common to all samples regardless of glycaemic state. A number of histone derived peptides were identified in all samples and cell lines. These peptides had a proline‐alanine rich N‐terminal region and a cationic C‐terminal, similar to antimicrobial peptides from histone H1 found in Atlantic salmon skin mucous. Synthetic peptides were produced by SPOT synthesis and the antimicrobial activity tested against luminescent Pseudomonas aeruginosa over 18 hours at 37°C in (100mM Tris (pH 7) and 20mM glucose). One of the crude peptides elicited a dose dependent inhibition of bacterial luminescence at 4.63±1.34 μM (n=3), indicating no bacteria survived. Truncated ...