Novel peptide 33mers have been designed by incorporating beta-conformation stabilizing residues from the beta-sheet domains of alpha-chemokines and functionally important residues from the beta-sheet domain of human neutrophil bactericidal protein (B/PI). B/PI is known for its ability to kill bacteria and to neutralize the action of bacterial endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS) which can induce septic shock leading to eventual death. Here, the goal was to make short linear peptides which demonstrate good beta-sheet folding and maintain bioactivity as in native B/PI. A library of 24 peptide 33mers (beta pep-1 to beta pep-24) were synthesized with various amino acid substitutions, CD and NMR data acquired in aqueous solution indicate that beta pep peptides form beta-sheet structure to varying degrees and self-associate as dimers and tetramers like the alpha-chemokines. Bactericidal activity toward Gram-negative Pseudomonas aeruginosa was tested, and beta pep-19 was found to be only about 5-fold less potent (62% kill at 1.2 X 10(-7) M) than native B/PI (80% kill at 2.9 x 10(-8) M). At LPS neutralization, beta pep-2 and -23 were found to be most active (66-78% effective at 1.2 x 10(-6) M), being only about 50-100-fold less active than B/PI (50% at 1.5 x 10(-8) M). In terms of structure-activity relations, beta-sheet structural stability correlates with the capacity to neutralize LPS, but not with bactericidal activity. Although a net positive charge is necessary for activity, it is not sufficient for optimal activity. Hydrophobic residues tend to influence activities indirectly by affecting structural stability. Furthermore, results show that sequentially and spatially related residues from the beta-sheet domain of native B/PI can be designed into short linear peptides which show good beta-sheet folding and retain much of the native activity. This research contributes to the development of solutions to the problem of multiple drug-resistant, opportunistic microorganisms like P. aeruginosa and of agents effective at neutralizing bacterial endotoxin, (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.