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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, May 2008, p. 1834-1836, Vol. 52, No. 5
0066-4804/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.01347-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
A Peptide with a ProGln C Terminus in the Human Saliva Peptidome Exerts Bactericidal Activity against Propionibacterium acnes
Chun-Ming Huang,1,2,3*
Justin W. Torpey,4
Yu-Tseung Liu,3
Yun-Ru Chen,1,2
Katherine E. Williams,5
Elizabeth A. Komives,4 and
Richard L. Gallo1,2
Department of Medicine, Division of Dermatology, University of California, San Diego,1
VA San Diego Healthcare Center, San Diego,2
Moores Cancer Center, University of California, San Diego,3
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, San Diego, San Diego,4
Applied Biosystems, Foster City, California5
Received 18 October 2007/
Returned for modification 3 January 2008/
Accepted 11 February 2008

ABSTRACT
Nine proline-rich peptides ending with a proline-glutamine C
terminus in a salivary peptidome were sequenced by matrix-assisted
laser desorption ionization time of flight time of flight tandem
mass spectrometry. A GPPPQGGRPQ peptide binds gram-positive
Propionibacterium acnes and considerably inhibits bacterial
growth. The peptide exhibiting innate immunity may be applied
for treatment of various
P. acnes-associated human diseases.

TEXT
Saliva has been evaluated as a diagnostic and prognostic fluid.
In this study, a human saliva peptidome was characterized by
matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight time
of flight (MALDI-TOF-TOF). Nine proline-rich peptides ending
with a proline-glutamine sequence (PQ C terminus) were sequenced
(Table
1). Previous studies have shown the release of a pentapeptide,
RGRPQ, from salivary proline-rich proteins upon proteolysis
by oral bacteria (
6). The pentapeptide behaved as an innate-immunity-like
peptide, since synthetic RGRPQ was found to desorb bound bacteria
(
6). In addition, a synthetic GGRPQ peptide showed activity
equal to that of RGRPQ, which exhibited an excellent ability
to inhibit the adhesion of oral bacteria to salivary proline-rich
proteins with which hydroxyapatite beads were coated (
6). By
searching the nine peptides with PQ C termini found in the saliva
peptidome (Table
1), we found that one peptide (GPPPQ
GGRPQ [
m/z 990.60]) contained the GGRPQ C-terminal residues (underlined).
Thus, this peptide was selected for investigation of its bacterial
binding and antimicrobial activities.
Whole saliva from two males and one female between the ages
of 20 and 40 was collected according to protocols described
previously (
9). After centrifugation (14,000
x g), the clear
whole-saliva supernatants (0.4 µg/µl) collected
from the three volunteers were pooled, digested immediately
with trypsin (20 ng/µl) overnight (
20), and then mixed
1:2 with alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnimic acid (7 mg/ml) for analysis
by liquid chromatography-MALDI-TOF-TOF mass spectrometry (MS)
(4800 TOF-TOF Analyzer; Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA)
(
2,
21). Sixty-three saliva peptides corresponding to 22 proteins
were identified from tryptic digests (data not shown). Nine
saliva peptides ending with a PQ C terminus (Table
1) were derived
from basic salivary proline-rich protein 2, salivary acidic
proline-rich phosphoprotein (1/2), and basic proline-rich peptide
P-E (IB-9).
The GPPPQGGRPQ peptide was synthesized and labeled with fluorescein (GenScript Corp., Piscataway, NJ). The fluorescein-labeled peptide was obtained by coupling 5(6)-carboxyfluorescein to the amino terminus of GPPPQGGRPQ (10). Two gram-positive oral bacteria, Porphyromonas gingivalis (ATCC 33277) and Porphyromonas acnes (ATCC 6919) (11, 16), were chosen for interaction with GPPPQGGRPQ. Both bacteria (108 CFU) were incubated with fluorescein-labeled or unlabeled GPPPQGGRPQ (1 and 10 µM) for 1 h. The green fluorescence derived from the binding of peptides to the bacteria was detectable only when fluorescein-labeled peptide was incubated with P. acnes (Fig. 1), but not P. gingivalis (Fig. 1F), indicating that GPPPQGGRPQ selectively adhered to P. acnes. The green fluorescence was visible when P. acnes was incubated with 1 µM (Fig. 1C) or 10 µM (Fig. 1D) of fluorescein-labeled GPPPQGGRPQ, but not unlabeled GPPPQGGRPQ (Fig. 1A) and a fluorescein-labeled CGKRK (10 µM) (Fig. 1B) (a gift from Zhang Lianglin, Moores Cancer Center at the University of California, San Diego). Notably, the green fluorescence generated by 1 µM of fluorescein-labeled peptide was entirely quenched (Fig. 1E) when 1 mM of the unlabeled GPPPQGGRPQ was present in the reaction mixture of fluorescein-labeled peptide with P. acnes, indicating that the binding of GPPPQGGRPQ to P. acnes is peptide specific.
We next examined if the GPPPQGGRPQ peptide influences the growth
of
P. acnes. P. acnes (10
5 CFU) was preincubated with phosphate-buffered
saline (PBS) (Fig.
2A) or GPPPQGGRPQ at concentrations of 1
µM (Fig.
2C), 10 µM (Fig.
2D), and 100 µM
(Fig.
2E) for 3 h. Preincubation of
P. acnes with an antibiotic
mixture (500 units/ml of penicillin G and 0.5 mg/ml of streptomycin
sulfate) for 3 h significantly inhibited the 2-day growth of
P. acnes (2.1
x 10
3 ± 6.3
x 10
3 CFU) in comparison with
that after incubation of
P. acnes with PBS (20.5
x 10
5 ±
2.5
x 10
5 CFU) (Fig.
2B and F). Treatment of
P. acnes with 1,
10, and 100 µM of GPPPQGGRPQ considerably attenuated the
colonization (Fig.
2C to E) and the growth (26.5
x 10
4 ±
6.3
x 10
4, 18
x 10
3 ± 2.6
x 10
3, and 9.5
x 10
2 ±
2.1
x 10
2 CFU, respectively) of
P. acnes. These results demonstrated
that the GPPPQGGRPQ peptide exerts a bactericidal activity against
P. acnes.
Although we failed to identify low-abundance proteins, such
as cytokines and defensins, that normally are considerably elevated
during oral inflammation (
15), an advanced electrospray ionization
tandem MS with higher sensitivity may make it possible to identify
lower-abundance saliva proteins (
7). Since the intensity of
each peptide signal in an MS spectrum does not necessarily correlate
with its biological abundance, quantitative MS using isotopic-tag
labeling (
19) will provide a means to determine the differential
abundances of peptides under different biological conditions.
Although it is unclear if the GPPPQGGRPQ peptide is derived
from fragmentation of bacterium-bound proline-rich proteins,
it has been documented that proline-rich proteins can be cleaved
by proteases from oral
Streptococcus and
Actinomyces species
and converted into peptides with bacterium-binding PQ C termini
(
13). Intriguingly, several peptides with PQ C termini were
identified in undigested human parotid saliva (
8), suggesting
that peptides with PQ C termini may exist naturally in human
whole saliva. When oral bacteria predominate, these peptides
with PQ C termini may serve as innate-immunity-like peptides
(
5,
13) to bind and/or kill oral bacteria instantly. The PQ-rich
repeats also exist in other proteins, such as diacylglycerol
kinase, an enzyme involved in the regulation of signal transduction
(
18). It has also been reported that peptides with polyprolyl
or polyglutamine sequences could contribute to amyloidogenic
diseases (
14) and display the activity of cellular permeation,
as well as binding to heat shock proteins (
1). Thus, peptides
with PQ C termini in saliva may have biological functions other
than acting as antimicrobials.
Although the target molecules of the GPPPQGGRPQ peptide in P. acnes are undetermined, it has been documented that an RGRPQ peptide could be similar to the ERGMT peptide signal that affects intra- or extracellular receptors and gene expression in Bacillus subtilis (12). Future studies will include determining the eukaryotic toxicity and MICs of the GPPPQGGRPQ peptide against P. acnes. The complete genome of P. acnes has been sequenced (3, 4). P. acnes is involved in many infectious diseases, including acne vulgaris and biofilm formation on implanted biomaterials (17). Therefore, the future applications of the GPPPQGGRPQ peptide may include monitoring of the distribution of P. acnes and/or treatment of P. acnes-associated diseases by inhibiting bacterial growth.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants
(1-R01 AI067395, R21-R022754-01, and R21-I58002-01), a Dermatology
Foundation Grant, and a SERCEB grant (5 U54 AI057157-02).
We thank M. Kirk and S. Barnes for their assistance with MS.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Division of Dermatology, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, and VA San Diego Healthcare Center, Rm. 3217A, 3350 La Jolla Village Drive, San Diego, CA. Phone: (858) 552-8585, ext. 3708. Fax: (858) 642-1435. E-mail:
chunming{at}ucsd.edu 
Published ahead of print on 19 February 2008. 

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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, May 2008, p. 1834-1836, Vol. 52, No. 5
0066-4804/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.01347-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.