Romano Maria, Falchi Federico, De Gregorio Eliana, Stabile Maria, Migliaccio Antonella, Ruggiero Alessia, Napolitano Valeria, Autiero Ida, Squeglia Flavia, Berisio Rita
Department of Biomedical Sciences, Institute of Biostructures and Bioimaging, National Research Council (CNR), Napoli, Italy.
Department of Pharmacy and Biotechnology, Alma Mater Studiorum-University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
Front Microbiol. 2024 Nov 28;15:1501051. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2024.1501051. eCollection 2024.
Antimicrobial-resistant pathogens are an ongoing threat to human and animal health. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), colistin is considered the last resort antibiotic against human infections due to multidrug-resistant Gram-negative organisms-including , a priority-1 pathogen. Despite colistin being considered a last resort antibiotic, transferable bacterial resistance to this drug has been reported in humans and animals. This makes addressing colistin resistance a critical priority in public health efforts. The large PetN transferase membrane protein PmrC is responsible for colistin resistance due to its catalysed modification of lipid A of the external membrane. Despite its importance, this potential drug target was never characterised at a molecular level.
The recombinant production of large membrane proteins in their native forms is a bottleneck in modern molecular biology. In this study, we recombinantly produced PmrC and biophysically characterised it in solution. We employed approaches, including virtual screening and molecular modelling, to identify PmrC ligands. The binding of these ligands to PmrC was measured using Microscale Thermophoresis (MST). The best ligand was tested for its ability to hamper colistin resistance in clinical isolates. Finally, we checked that the identified compound was not cytotoxic at the used concentrations by haemolysis assays.
We successfully produced PmrC PetN transferase membrane protein in high yields and showed that PmrC is a stable α-β protein, with melting temperature T = 60°C. Based on the PmrC structural model, we identified a promising druggable cavity. Therefore, we used a structure-based virtual screening to identify potential inhibitors. A small molecule, here denominated as s-Phen, was proved to bind PmrC with μM affinity. Microbiological assays confirmed that the s-Phen can drastically reduce colistin minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) in two -resistant isolates and that it is not cytotoxic. Importantly, PmrC binding pocket to s-Phen is highly conserved in all homologues of PmrC, regardless of the location of genes encoding for them and of their operons.
Our study provides a molecular characterisation of PmrC and demonstrates the importance of PmrC as a drug target and the strong potential of PmrC binding molecules to act as colistin adjuvants, operating as synergistic tools to combat multiresistant nosocomial pathogens.
抗菌耐药性病原体对人类和动物健康构成持续威胁。根据世界卫生组织(WHO)的说法,由于包括1级优先病原体[此处原文缺失具体病原体名称]在内的多重耐药革兰氏阴性菌,黏菌素被视为治疗人类感染的最后一道抗生素防线。尽管黏菌素被视为最后一道抗生素防线,但在人类和动物中均有报道细菌对该药物产生了可转移的耐药性。这使得解决黏菌素耐药性问题成为公共卫生工作的关键优先事项。大型PetN转移酶膜蛋白PmrC因其催化修饰外膜脂质A而导致对黏菌素耐药。尽管其很重要,但这一潜在的药物靶点从未在分子水平上得到表征。
以天然形式重组生产大型膜蛋白是现代分子生物学中的一个瓶颈。在本研究中,我们重组生产了PmrC并在溶液中对其进行了生物物理表征。我们采用了包括虚拟筛选和分子建模在内的方法来鉴定PmrC配体。使用微量热泳动(MST)测量这些配体与PmrC的结合。测试了最佳配体抑制临床分离株中黏菌素耐药性的能力。最后,我们通过溶血试验检查所鉴定的化合物在所用浓度下是否具有细胞毒性。
我们成功高产表达了PmrC PetN转移酶膜蛋白,并表明PmrC是一种稳定的α-β蛋白,解链温度T = 60°C。基于PmrC的结构模型,我们确定了一个有前景的可成药腔。因此,我们使用基于结构的虚拟筛选来鉴定潜在抑制剂。一种小分子,此处命名为s-Phen,被证明以微摩尔亲和力结合PmrC。微生物学试验证实,s-Phen可显著降低两种耐药分离株中黏菌素的最低抑菌浓度(MIC),且无细胞毒性。重要的是,PmrC与s-Phen的结合口袋在PmrC的所有同源物中高度保守,无论编码它们的基因及其操纵子的位置如何。
我们的研究提供了PmrC的分子表征,并证明了PmrC作为药物靶点的重要性以及PmrC结合分子作为黏菌素佐剂发挥作用的强大潜力,可作为对抗多重耐药医院病原体的协同工具。