PLoS ONE (Apr 2010)

Oxpholipin 11D: an anti-inflammatory peptide that binds cholesterol and oxidized phospholipids.

  • Piotr Ruchala,
  • Mohamad Navab,
  • Chun-Ling Jung,
  • Susan Hama-Levy,
  • Ewa D Micewicz,
  • Hai Luong,
  • Jonathan E Reyles,
  • Shantanu Sharma,
  • Alan J Waring,
  • Alan M Fogelman,
  • Robert I Lehrer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010181
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 4
p. e10181

Abstract

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Many gram-positive bacteria produce pore-forming exotoxins that contain a highly conserved, 12-residue domain (ECTGLAWEWWRT) that binds cholesterol. This domain is usually flanked N-terminally by arginine and C-terminally by valine. We used this 14-residue sequence as a template to create a small library of peptides that bind cholesterol and other lipids.Several of these peptides manifested anti-inflammatory properties in a predictive in vitro monocyte chemotactic assay, and some also diminished the pro-inflammatory effects of low-density lipoprotein in apoE-deficient mice. The most potent analog, Oxpholipin-11D (OxP-11D), contained D-amino acids exclusively and was identical to the 14-residue design template except that diphenylalanine replaced cysteine-3. In surface plasmon resonance binding studies, OxP-11D bound oxidized (phospho)lipids and sterols in much the same manner as D-4F, a widely studied cardioprotective apoA-I-mimetic peptide with anti-inflammatory properties. In contrast to D-4F, which adopts a stable alpha-helical structure in solution, the OxP-11D structure was flexible and contained multiple turn-like features.Given the substantial evidence that oxidized phospholipids are pro-inflammatory in vivo, OxP-11D and other Oxpholipins may have therapeutic potential.