At a time of the emergence of drug-resistant bacterial
strains, the development of antimicrobial compounds with
novel mechanisms of action is of considerable interest.
Perhaps the most promising among these is a family of antibacterial
peptides originally isolated from insects. These were shown
to act in a stereospecific manner on an as-yet unidentified
target bacterial protein. One of these peptides, drosocin,
is inactive in vivo due to the rapid decomposition in mammalian
sera. However, another family member, pyrrhocoricin, is
significantly more stable, has increased in vitro efficacy
against Gram-negative bacterial strains, and if administered
alone, as we show here, is devoid of in vitro or in vivo
toxicity. At low doses, pyrrhocoricin protected mice against
Escherichia coli infection, but at a higher dose
augmented the infection of compromised animals. Analogs
of pyrrhocoricin were, therefore, synthesized to further
improve protease resistance and reduce toxicity. A linear
derivative containing unnatural amino acids at both termini
showed high potency and lack of toxicity in vivo and an
expanded cyclic analog displayed broad activity spectrum
in vitro. The bioactive conformation of native pyrrhocoricin
was determined by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy,
and similar to drosocin, reverse turns were identified
as pharmacologically important elements at the termini,
bridged by an extended peptide domain. Knowledge of the
primary and secondary structural requirements for in vivo
activity of these peptides allows the design of novel antibacterial
drug leads.