Solution structure of plantaricin C, a novel lantibiotic

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Abstract

Plantaricin C, a bacteriocin produced by a Lactobacillus plantarum strain of dairy origin, is a lantibiotic. One dehydroalanine, one lanthionine and three β-methyl-lanthionine residues were found in its 27 amino acid sequence. The plantaricin C structure has two parts: the first comprises the six NH2-terminal residues, four of which are lysines, which confer a strong positive charge to this stretch. The amino acids in positions 7 and 27 form the lanthionine bridge, giving a globular conformation to the rest of the molecule. The β-methyl-lanthionine bridges are established between residues 12-15, 13-18 and 23-26. This central region has a charge distribution compatible with an amphipathic α-helix, through which plantaricin C would become inserted into the membrane matrix of sensitive organisms, provoking the opening of pores and leakage of the cytoplasmic content.

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Turner, D. L., Brennan, L., Meyer, H. E., Lohaus, C., Siethoff, C., Costa, H. S., … Suárez, J. E. (1999). Solution structure of plantaricin C, a novel lantibiotic. European Journal of Biochemistry, 264(3), 833–839. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1432-1327.1999.00674.x

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