2022 Annual Meeting
(565c) Computational Discovery of Peptide Inhibitors That Neutralize C. Diff. Toxin a in Jejunum and Colon Epithelial Cells
Authors
During infection, the C. diff. pathogen produces two large virulent toxins (toxins A and B) that share 71% sequence homology. The glucosyltransferase domain (GTD) of these toxins acts by binding Uridine diphosphate (UDP)-glucose, hydrolyzing it into glucose and UDP, and attaching the glucose monomer to the human Rho family of GTPases. Glycosylation of the GTPases by toxin A and toxin B GTDs leads to disruption of the cytoskeleton, apoptosis, and death of the colon epithelial mammalian cells.
The objective of this project is to computationally design peptide inhibitors that bind with high affinity and specificity to C. diff. toxin A GTD to inhibit its activity. We use an automated Peptide Binding Design (PepBD) algorithm developed in our lab to design peptide sequences that bind to C. diff. Toxin A. Our peptide search algorithm employs Monte Carlo methods, self-consistent mean-field theory, and the concerted rotation (CONROT) technique to search for peptides in sequence and conformation space that bind to a target protein. The starting input structure for the algorithm requires a reference ligand, which is usually an experimentally determined peptide sequence that has a good binding affinity to the target protein.
We initially discovered a 10-mer peptide inhibitor, NPA, using EGWHAHTGGG (Kd = 100 nM) as the reference ligand, a peptide identified by the Feig lab using phage display. The peptide showed good neutralization against toxin A when tested in-vitro in jejunum (intestinal) cells but showed no effect in colon cells. Based on feedback from experiments and further computational analysis we designed shorter peptide inhibitors. These peptides neutralize toxin A in both jejunum and colon cells. Current work is focused on furthering our understanding of the interaction of these peptides with the toxins, and discovering peptides that can bind to Toxin B.