Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are ancient and conserved across the tree of
life. Their efficacy over evolutionary time has been largely attributed to
their mechanisms of killing. Yet, the understanding of their pharmacodynamics
both in vivo and in vitro is very limited. This is, however, crucial for
applications of AMPs as drugs and also informs the understanding of the action
of AMPs in natural immune systems. Here, we selected six different AMPs from
different organisms to test their individual and combined effects in vitro. We
analyzed their pharmacodynamics based on the Hill function and evaluated the
interaction of combinations of two and three AMPs. Interactions of AMPs in our
study were mostly synergistic, and three-AMP combinations displayed stronger
synergism than two-AMP combinations. This suggests synergism to be a common
phenomenon in AMP interaction. Additionally, AMPs displayed a sharp increase
in killing within a narrow dose range, contrasting with those of antibiotics.
We suggest that our results could lead a way toward better evaluation of AMP
application in practice and shed some light on the evolutionary consequences
of antimicrobial peptide interactions within the immune system of organisms