Scientific Reports (Mar 2021)

OMN6 a novel bioengineered peptide for the treatment of multidrug resistant Gram negative bacteria

  • Shira Mandel,
  • Janna Michaeli,
  • Noa Nur,
  • Isabelle Erbetti,
  • Jonathan Zazoun,
  • Livia Ferrari,
  • Antonio Felici,
  • Moshe Cohen-Kutner,
  • Niv Bachnoff

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-86155-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract New antimicrobial agents are urgently needed, especially to eliminate multidrug resistant Gram-negative bacteria that stand for most antibiotic-resistant threats. In the following study, we present superior properties of an engineered antimicrobial peptide, OMN6, a 40-amino acid cyclic peptide based on Cecropin A, that presents high efficacy against Gram-negative bacteria with a bactericidal mechanism of action. The target of OMN6 is assumed to be the bacterial membrane in contrast to small molecule-based agents which bind to a specific enzyme or bacterial site. Moreover, OMN6 mechanism of action is effective on Acinetobacter baumannii laboratory strains and clinical isolates, regardless of the bacteria genotype or resistance-phenotype, thus, is by orders-of-magnitude, less likely for mutation-driven development of resistance, recrudescence, or tolerance. OMN6 displays an increase in stability and a significant decrease in proteolytic degradation with full safety margin on erythrocytes and HEK293T cells. Taken together, these results strongly suggest that OMN6 is an efficient, stable, and non-toxic novel antimicrobial agent with the potential to become a therapy for humans.