Current Protein and Peptide Science - Volume 5, Issue 5, 2004
Volume 5, Issue 5, 2004
-
-
Discovery, Structure and Biological Activities of the Cyclotides
Authors: David J. Craik, Norelle L. Daly, Jason Mulvenna, Manuel R. Plan and Manuela TrabiThe cyclotides are a family of small disulfide rich proteins that have a cyclic peptide backbone and a cystine knot formed by three conserved disulfide bonds. The combination of these two structural motifs contributes to the exceptional chemical, thermal and enzymatic stability of the cyclotides, which retain bioactivity after boiling. They were initially discovered based on native medicine or screening studies associated Read More
-
-
-
Novel Strategies for Isolation and Characterization of Cyclotides: The Discovery of Bioactive Macrocyclic Plant Polypeptides in the Violaceae
Authors: Ulf Goransson, Erika Svangard, Per Claeson and Lars BohlinThis review focuses on the discovery of cyclotides in the plant family Violaceae, their isolation and their anticancer effects. These macrocyclic plant peptides consist of about 30 amino acids, including three conserved disulfide bonds in a cystine knotted arrangement, which renders them a remarkable stability. Their unique structure, combined with a wide array of biological activities, makes them of great interest as possible Read More
-
-
-
Anti-HIV Cyclotides
Authors: Kirk R. Gustafson, Tawnya C. McKee and Heidi R. BokeschThe cyclotides are a recently discovered, structurally unique family of bioactive plant peptides. Their discovery spawned a series of structural analyses, synthetic efforts, and studies to define the biosynthesis and biological properties of these novel peptide metabolites. Cyclotides have a head-to-tail cyclized amino acid backbone and a conserved cystine knot motif that provides an extremely stable structural framework. T Read More
-
-
-
Squash Inhibitors: From Structural Motifs to Macrocyclic Knottins
In this article, we will first introduce the squash inhibitors, a well established family of highly potent canonical serine proteinase inhibitors isolated from Cucurbitaceae. The squash inhibitors were among the first discovered proteins with the typical knottin fold shared by numerous peptides extracted from plants, animals and fungi. Knottins contain three knotted disulfide bridges, two of them arranged as a Cystine-Stabilized Read More
-
-
-
Sunflower Trypsin Inhibitor-1
Authors: Michael L.J. Korsinczky, Horst J. Schirra and David J. CraikSFTI-1 is a bicyclic 14 amino acid peptide that was originally isolated from the seeds of the sunflower Helianthus annuus. It is a potent inhibitor of trypsin, with a sub-nanomolar Ki value and is homologous to the active site region of the well-known family of serine protease inhibitors known as the Bowman-Birk trypsin inhibitors. It has a cyclic backbone that is cross-braced by a single disulfide bridge and a network of hydrogen b Read More
-
-
-
θ-Defensins: Cyclic Antimicrobial Peptides Produced by Binary Ligation of Truncated α-Defensins
More LessThe first cyclic peptide discovered in animals is an antimicrobial octadecapeptide that is expressed in leukocytes of rhesus monkeys. The peptide, termed rhesus θdefensin 1 (RTD-1) is the prototype of a new family of antimicrobial peptides, which like the previously characterized α and βdefensin families, possesses broad spectrum microbicidal activities against bacteria, fungi, and protects mononuclear cells from infecti Read More
-
-
-
Retrocyclins: Using Past as Prologue
Authors: Alexander M. Cole, Wei Wang, Alan J. Waring and Robert I. LehrerRetrocyclins are synthetic θdefensins that were reconstructed from genetic blueprints that had remained unused for at least 7.5 million years. From phylogenetic studies, it appears that θdefensins arose in Old World Monkeys, after that lineage had separated from the prosimians and New World Monkeys. Although some nonhuman primates continue to produce θdefensin peptides today, Homo sapiens and his gorilla, bonobo, and Read More
-
-
-
Microcin J25, from the Macrocyclic to the Lasso Structure: Implications for Biosynthetic, Evolutionary and Biotechnological Perspectives
Microcin J25 (MccJ25) is a cyclic antibacterial peptide secreted by a fecal isolate of Escherichia coli. It exerts highly potent activity on Salmonella and Escherichia species. The microcin is recognized at the outer membrane of sensitive strains by the FhuA multifunctional protein, which belongs to the iron / siderophore receptor family, and inhibits bacterial transcription through binding to the RNA-polymerase β' subunit. The mcjA Read More
-
-
-
The Circular Bacteriocins Gassericin A and Circularin A
Authors: Yasushi Kawai, Rober Kemperman, Jan Kok and Tadao SaitoGassericin A, a bacteriocin produced by Lactobacillus gasseri LA39, shows antibacterial activity against a number of Gram-positive food-borne pathogenic bacteria. Circularin A produced by Clostridium beijerinckii ATCC25752 is active against C. tyrobutyricum, a known cheese-spoilage bacterium. Both bacteriocins were purified to homogeneity from culture supernatants by reverse-phase chromatography and the subse Read More
-
-
-
Peptide AS-48: Prototype of a New Class of Cyclic Bacteriocins
After the discovery of bacteriocin AS-48, a 70-residue cyclic peptide produced by Enterococcus faecalis subsp. liquefaciens, some naturally-occurring cyclic proteins from bacteria have been reported. AS-48 is encoded by the 68-kb pheromone-responsive plasmid pMB2, and the gene cluster involved in production and immunity has been identified and sequenced. This peptide exerts a bactericidal action on sensitive cel Read More
-
-
-
Protein Circlets as Sex Pilus Subunits
Authors: Markus Kalkum, Ralf Eisenbrandt and Erich LankaThe largest circular protein structures discovered define a class of transfer proteins acting in bacterial conjugation and type IV secretion. Proteins ranging from 73 to 78 residues with head-to-tail peptide bonds constitute the major subunit of conjugative pili of some type IV secretion systems. Their plasmid-encoded precursors are enzymatically processed and cyclized before being assembled into pili. These extra-cellular surfa Read More
-
Volumes & issues
-
Volume 26 (2025)
-
Volume (2025)
-
Volume 25 (2024)
-
Volume 24 (2023)
-
Volume 23 (2022)
-
Volume 22 (2021)
-
Volume 21 (2020)
-
Volume 20 (2019)
-
Volume 19 (2018)
-
Volume 18 (2017)
-
Volume 17 (2016)
-
Volume 16 (2015)
-
Volume 15 (2014)
-
Volume 14 (2013)
-
Volume 13 (2012)
-
Volume 12 (2011)
-
Volume 11 (2010)
-
Volume 10 (2009)
-
Volume 9 (2008)
-
Volume 8 (2007)
-
Volume 7 (2006)
-
Volume 6 (2005)
-
Volume 5 (2004)
-
Volume 4 (2003)
-
Volume 3 (2002)
-
Volume 2 (2001)
-
Volume 1 (2000)
Most Read This Month
Article
content/journals/cpps
Journal
10
5
false
en
