Ruiz-Blanco, Yasser B.; Agüero-Chapin, Guillermin; Romero-Molina, Sandra; Antunes, Agostinho; Olari, Lia-Raluca; Spellerberg, Barbara; Münch, Jan; Sanchez-Garcia, Elsa:
ABP-Finder : A Tool to Identify Antibacterial Peptides and the Gram-Staining Type of Targeted Bacteria
In: Antibiotics, Jg. 11 (2022), Heft 12, Artikel 1708
2022Artikel/Aufsatz in ZeitschriftOA Gold
BiologieFakultät für Biologie » Computational BiochemistryForschungszentren » Zentrum für Medizinische Biotechnologie (ZMB)
Damit verbunden: 2 Publikation(en)
Titel in Englisch:
ABP-Finder : A Tool to Identify Antibacterial Peptides and the Gram-Staining Type of Targeted Bacteria
Autor*in:
Ruiz-Blanco, Yasser B.
Sonstiges
korrespondierende*r Autor*in
;
Agüero-Chapin, Guillermin
;
Romero-Molina, Sandra
;
Antunes, Agostinho
;
Olari, Lia-Raluca
;
Spellerberg, Barbara
;
Münch, Jan
;
Sanchez-Garcia, ElsaUDE
LSF ID
59527
ORCID
0000-0002-9211-5803ORCID iD
Sonstiges
der Hochschule zugeordnete*r Autor*in
Erscheinungsjahr:
2022
Open Access?:
OA Gold
PubMed ID
Scopus ID
Notiz:
CA Ruiz-Blanco
Sprache des Textes:
Englisch
Schlagwort, Thema:
AMPs database ; antibacterial peptide ; Gram staining-based target ; human peptidome ; machine learning ; peptide library screening ; StarPep

Abstract in Englisch:

Multi-drug resistance in bacteria is a major health problem worldwide. To overcome this issue, new approaches allowing for the identification and development of antibacterial agents are urgently needed. Peptides, due to their binding specificity and low expected side effects, are promising candidates for a new generation of antibiotics. For over two decades, a large diversity of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) has been discovered and annotated in public databases. The AMP family encompasses nearly 20 biological functions, thus representing a potentially valuable resource for data mining analyses. Nonetheless, despite the availability of machine learning-based approaches focused on AMPs, these tools lack evidence of successful application for AMPs’ discovery, and many are not designed to predict a specific function for putative AMPs, such as antibacterial activity. Consequently, among the apparent variety of data mining methods to screen peptide sequences for antibacterial activity, only few tools can deal with such task consistently, although with limited precision and generally no information about the possible targets. Here, we addressed this gap by introducing a tool specifically designed to identify antibacterial peptides (ABPs) with an estimation of which type of bacteria is susceptible to the action of these peptides, according to their response to the Gram-staining assay. Our tool is freely available via a web server named ABP-Finder. This new method ranks within the top state-of-the-art ABP predictors, particularly in terms of precision. Importantly, we showed the successful application of ABP-Finder for the screening of a large peptide library from the human urine peptidome and the identification of an antibacterial peptide.