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. 2018 Spring;19(2):72–81.

Table 3.

A few important antimicrobial peptides from fish skin mucus with their structure and specificity

Peptide Species Structure Specificity References
Pardaxin Moses sole Cationic, amphipathic, á-helix Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria Shai (1994)
Hipposin Atlantic halibut Histone H2A N-terminal fragment Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria Park et al. (1996)
Parasin I Amur catfish Histone H2A N-terminal fragment Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, fungi Park et al. (1996)
Pluerocidin Winter flounder Cationic, amphipathic, á-helix Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria Douglas et al. (2001)
Piscidins Gadus morhua Cationic, amphipathic, á-helix Bacteria Fernandes et al. (2010); Ruangsri et al. (2012)
Epinecidins Epinephelus coioides Cationic, amphipathic, á-helix Bacteria, virus Yin et al. (2006); Peng et al. (2010)
Gaduscidins Atlantic cod Cationic, amphipathic, á-helix Bacteria, virus Browne et al. (2011)
Cathelicidins Atlantic salmon Cationic, amphipathic, á-helix Bacteria Chang et al. (2006); Bridle et al. (2011)
Grammistins Grammistes sexllineatus Cationic, amphipathic, á-helix Bacteria Shiomi et al. (2000); Sugiyama et al. (2005)
Oncorhyncin III Rainbow trout Cleavage product of the non-histone chromosomal protein H6 Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria Douglas et al. (2001)
Moronecidins Hybrid striped bass Cationic, amphipathic, á-helix Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, fungi, yeast Lauth et al. (2002)
SAMP H1 Atlantic salmon Proline-rich histone H1 N-terminal peptide fragment Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria Luders et al. (2005)