This work was supported by grants from Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (FAPERJ), Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq), Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) and Programa de Apoio aos Núcleos de Excelência (PRONEX). “
“A wide variety of organisms have an innate immune system that provides the first line of defense against external pathogens. Vertebrates have, among the components of this innate immune system,
defensins comprising a diverse group of small cationic antimicrobial peptides. These molecules have both antimicrobial and cell signaling functions (Lai and Gallo, 2009). They are grouped into three families: alpha (α), beta (β), and theta (θ), according to the pattern of disulfide bonds between cysteine residues
(Cys). β-Defensins are a subgroup of defensins that have a characteristic β-sheet-rich fold plus six conserved Cys with particular spacing INK 128 cell line and intramolecular bonds. The structure of pre-β-defensin consists of a signal sequence, a short or absent propiece, and the mature defensin ( Ganz, 2003). β-Defensin-like peptides are found in the venom of diverse organisms, including sea anemones, snakes and platypus Rapamycin cost ( Torres and Kuchel, 2004) as well lizards ( Fry et al., 2005). Interestingly crotamine (one of four major components of the venom of the South American rattlesnake) has been shown to have a global fold and a Cys-pairing pattern similar to that of the β-defensin scaffold, although the peptides show low sequence similarity and display different biological activities ( Fadel et al., 2005). Crotamine has an antimicrobial activity against Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis, as well against Candida spp., Trichosporon spp. and Cryptococcus neoformans ( Oguiura et al., 2011;
Yamane et al., 2012; Yount et al., 2009). Defensin-like peptides from the platypus also show a similar overall fold and Cys-pairing pattern as β-defensin-2, although no antimicrobial activity ( Torres et al., 1999). In vertebrates, β-defensin-like genes have been described in birds (Xiao et al., 2004), fishes (Zou et al., 2007), lizards (Dalla SPTLC1 Valle et al., 2012), mammals and primates (Del Pero et al., 2002; Luenser and Ludwig, 2005; Luenser et al., 2005; Patil et al., 2005), platypus (Whittington et al., 2008) and rattlesnakes (Rádis-Baptista et al., 2003 and Rádis-Baptista et al., 2004). The β-defensin genes are organized in a different manner in each animal group. The most common structure found in mammals is two exons and one intron (Patil et al., 2005), which also includes the platypus (Whittington et al., 2008), while there are four exons and three introns in chickens (Xiao et al., 2004). In snakes, β-defensin-like genes have three exons and two introns (Rádis-Baptista et al., 2003; 2004), as well as lizards (Dalla Valle et al., 2012) and fishes (Zou et al., 2007).