Frogs' skins were known to secrete peptides that defend them against bacteria. The finding, published Tuesday in Immunity, suggests that the peptides represent a resource for antiviral drug discovery as well.
The first author of the paper is graduate student David Holthausen, and the research grew out of collaboration with
Jacob and his colleagues named one of the antiviral peptides they identified urumin, after a
Peptides are short chains of amino acids, the building blocks of proteins. Some
«I was almost knocked off my chair," Jacob says. «In the beginning, I thought that when you do drug discovery, you have to go through thousands of drug candidates, even a million, before you get 1 or 2 hits. And here we did 32 peptides, and we had 4 hits.»
It turns out that urumin binds the stalk of hemagglutinin, a less variable region of the flu virus that is also the target of proposed universal vaccines. This specificity could be valuable because current
Delivered intranasally, urumin protected unvaccinated mice against a lethal dose of some flu viruses. Urumin was specific for H1 strains of flu, such as the 2009 pandemic strain, and was not effective against other current strains such as H3N2.
Developing antimicrobial peptides into effective drugs has been a challenge in the past, partly because enzymes in the body can break them down. Jacob’s lab is now exploring ways to stabilize antiviral peptides such as urumin, as well as looking for
Emory
Source: http://news.emory.edu/stories/2017/04/flu_frogs_jacob_immunity/index.html