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1.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother ; 59(6): 3059-65, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25753646

ABSTRACT

Ceftazidime-avibactam and comparator antibiotics were tested by the broth microdilution method against 200 Enterobacteriaceae and 25 Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains resistant to fluoroquinolones (including strains with the extended-spectrum ß-lactamase [ESBL] phenotype and ceftazidime-resistant strains) collected from our institution. The MICs and mechanisms of resistance to fluoroquinolone were also studied. Ninety-nine percent of fluoroquinolone-resistant Enterobacteriaceae strains were inhibited at a ceftazidime-avibactam MIC of ≤4 mg/liter (using the susceptible CLSI breakpoint for ceftazidime alone as a reference). Ceftazidime-avibactam was very active against ESBL Escherichia coli (MIC90 of 0.25 mg/liter), ESBL Klebsiella pneumoniae (MIC90 of 0.5 mg/liter), ceftazidime-resistant AmpC-producing species (MIC90 of 1 mg/liter), non-ESBL E. coli (MIC90 of ≤0.125 mg/liter), non-ESBL K. pneumoniae (MIC90 of 0.25 mg/liter), and ceftazidime-nonresistant AmpC-producing species (MIC90 of ≤0.5 mg/liter). Ninety-six percent of fluoroquinolone-resistant P. aeruginosa strains were inhibited at a ceftazidime-avibactam MIC of ≤8 mg/liter (using the susceptible CLSI breakpoint for ceftazidime alone as a reference), with a MIC90 of 8 mg/liter. Additionally, fluoroquinolone-resistant mutants from each species tested were obtained in vitro from two strains, one susceptible to ceftazidime and the other a ß-lactamase producer with a high MIC against ceftazidime but susceptible to ceftazidime-avibactam. Thereby, the impact of fluoroquinolone resistance on the activity of ceftazidime-avibactam could be assessed. The MIC90 values of ceftazidime-avibactam for the fluoroquinolone-resistant mutant strains of Enterobacteriaceae and P. aeruginosa were ≤4 mg/liter and ≤8 mg/liter, respectively. We conclude that the presence of fluoroquinolone resistance does not affect Enterobacteriaceae and P. aeruginosa susceptibility to ceftazidime-avibactam; that is, there is no cross-resistance.


Subject(s)
Azabicyclo Compounds/pharmacology , Ceftazidime/pharmacology , Enterobacteriaceae/drug effects , Fluoroquinolones/pharmacology , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/drug effects , Drug Combinations , Drug Resistance, Bacterial , Microbial Sensitivity Tests
2.
Curr Opin Chem Biol ; 5(5): 525-34, 2001 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11578925

ABSTRACT

Nonribosomal peptide synthetases are large enzyme complexes that synthesize a variety of peptide natural products through a thiotemplated mechanism. Assembly of the peptides proceeds through amino acid loading, amide-bond formation and chain translocation, and finally thioester lysis to release the product. The final products are often heavily modified, however, through methylation, epimerization, hydroxylation, heterocyclization, oxidative cross-linking and attachment of sugars. These activities are the province of specialized enzymes (either embedded in the multidomain nonribosomal peptide synthetase structure or standalone).


Subject(s)
Bacteria/metabolism , Multienzyme Complexes/metabolism , Peptide Biosynthesis , Peptide Synthases/chemistry , Peptides/metabolism , Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/metabolism , Esters/chemical synthesis , Esters/chemistry , Esters/metabolism , Glycosyltransferases , Methyltransferases/metabolism , Models, Chemical , Peptide Chain Elongation, Translational , Peptide Synthases/metabolism , Peptides/chemistry , Peptides, Cyclic/biosynthesis , Protein Conformation , Racemases and Epimerases/metabolism , Stereoisomerism
3.
Biochemistry ; 40(35): 10655-63, 2001 Sep 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11524010

ABSTRACT

The iron-chelating peptide vibriobactin of the pathogenic Vibrio cholerae is assembled by a four-subunit nonribosomal peptide synthetase complex, VibE, VibB, VibH, and VibF, using 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate and L-threonine as precursors to two 2,3-dihydroxyphenyl- (DHP-) methyloxazolinyl groups in amide linkage on a norspermidine scaffold. We have tested the ability of the six-domain VibF subunit (Cy-Cy-A-C-PCP-C) to utilize various L-threonine analogues and found the beta-functionalized amino acids serine and cysteine can function as alternate substrates in aminoacyl-AMP formation (adenylation or A domain), aminoacyl-S-enzyme formation (A domain), acylation by 2,3-dihydrobenzoyl- (DHB-) S-VibB (heterocyclization or Cy domain), heterocyclization to DHP-oxazolinyl- and DHP-thiazolinyl-S-enzyme forms of VibF (Cy domain) as well as transfer to DHB-norspermidine at both N(5) and N(9) positions (condensation or C domain) to make the bis(oxazolinyl) and bis(thiazolinyl) analogues of vibriobactin. When L-threonyl-S-pantetheine or L-threonyl-S-(N-acetyl)cysteamine was used as a small-molecule thioester analogue of the threonyl-S-VibF acyl enzyme intermediate, the Cy domain(s) of a CyCyA fragment of VibF generated DHB-threonyl-thioester products of the condensation step but not the methyloxazolinyl thioesters of the heterocyclization step. This clean separation of condensation from cyclization validates a two-stage mechanism for threonyl, seryl, and cysteinyl heterocyclization domains in siderophore and antibiotic synthetases. Full heterocyclization activity could be restored by providing CyCyA with the substrate L-threonyl-S-peptidyl carrier protein (PCP)-C2, suggesting an important role for the protein scaffold component of the heterocyclization acceptor substrate. We also examined heterocyclization donor substrate specificity at the level of acyl group and protein scaffold and observed intolerance for substitution at either position.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins , Catechols/metabolism , Oxazoles , Peptide Synthases/metabolism , Vibrio cholerae/enzymology , Amines/metabolism , Amino Acid Substitution , Benzoates/metabolism , Catalysis , Catechols/chemistry , Cloning, Molecular , Escherichia coli , Esters/metabolism , Heterocyclic Compounds/chemistry , Heterocyclic Compounds/metabolism , Peptide Synthases/chemistry , Peptide Synthases/isolation & purification , Substrate Specificity , Thiazoles/metabolism , Threonine/metabolism
5.
Biochemistry ; 39(50): 15522-30, 2000 Dec 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11112538

ABSTRACT

Vibriobactin [N(1)-(2,3-dihydroxybenzoyl)-N(5),N(9)-bis[2-(2, 3-dihydroxyphenyl)-5-methyloxazolinyl-4-carboxamido]norspermidine] , is an iron chelator from the cholera-causing bacterium Vibrio cholerae. The six-domain, 270 kDa nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) VibF, a component of vibriobactin synthetase, has been heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. VibF has an unusual NRPS domain organization: cyclization-cyclization-adenylation-condensation-peptidyl carrier protein-condensation (Cy(1)-Cy(2)-A-C(1)-PCP-C(2)). VibF activates and covalently loads its PCP with L-threonine, and together with vibriobactin synthetase proteins VibE (adenylation) and VibB (aryl carrier protein) condenses and heterocyclizes 2, 3-dihydroxybenzoyl-VibB with L-Thr to 2-dihydroxyphenyl-5-methyloxazolinyl-4-carboxy-VibF in the first demonstration of oxazoline formation by an NRPS cyclization domain. This enzyme-bound aryl oxazoline can be transferred by VibF to various amine acceptors but most efficiently to N(1)-(2, 3-dihydroxybenzoyl)norspermidine (k(cat) = 122 min(-1), K(m) = 1.7 microM), the product of 2,3-dihydroxybenzoyl-VibB, norspermidine, and VibH. This diacylated product undergoes a second aryl oxazoline acylation on its remaining secondary amine, also catalyzed by VibF, to yield vibriobactin. Vibriobactin biosynthesis in vitro has thus been accomplished from four proteins, VibE, VibB, VibF, and VibH, with the substrates 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid, L-Thr, norspermidine, and ATP. Vibriobactin synthetase is an unusual NRPS in that all intermediates are not covalently tethered as PCP thioesters and in that it represents an NRPS pathway with two branch points.


Subject(s)
Catechols/metabolism , Oxazoles , Peptide Synthases/analysis , Vibrio cholerae/enzymology , Peptide Synthases/genetics , Peptide Synthases/metabolism
6.
Biochemistry ; 39(50): 15513-21, 2000 Dec 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11112537

ABSTRACT

The Vibrio cholerae siderophore vibriobactin is biosynthesized from three molecules of 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate (DHB), two molecules of L-threonine, and one of norspermidine. Of the four genes positively implicated in vibriobactin biosynthesis, we have here expressed, purified, and assayed the products of three: vibE, vibB, and vibH. All three are homologous to nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) domains: VibE is a 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate-adenosyl monophosphate ligase, VibB is a bifunctional isochorismate lyase-aryl carrier protein (ArCP), and VibH is a novel amide synthase that represents a free-standing condensation (C) domain. VibE and VibB are homologous to EntE and EntB from Escherichia coli enterobactin synthetase; VibE activates DHB as the acyl adenylate and then transfers it to the free thiol of the phosphopantetheine arm of VibB's ArCP domain. VibH then condenses this DHB thioester (the donor) with the small molecule norspermidine (the acceptor), forming N(1)-(2, 3-dihydroxybenzoyl)norspermidine (DHB-NSPD) with a k(cat) of 600 min(-1) and a K(m) for acyl-VibB of 0.88 microM and for norspermidine of 1.5 mM. Exclusive monoacylation of a primary amine of norspermidine was observed. VibH also tolerates DHB-acylated EntB and 1,7-diaminoheptane, octylamine, and hexylamine as substrates, albeit at lowered catalytic efficiencies. DHB-NSPD possesses one of three acylations required for mature vibriobactin, and its formation confirms VibH's role in vibriobactin biosynthesis. VibH is a unique NRPS condensation domain that acts upon an upstream carrier-protein-bound donor and a downstream amine, turning over a soluble amide product, in contrast to an archetypal NRPS-embedded C domain that condenses two carrier protein thioesters.


Subject(s)
Catechols/metabolism , Oxazoles , Vibrio cholerae/metabolism , Amide Synthases/chemistry , Amide Synthases/metabolism , Catechols/chemistry , Peptide Synthases/chemistry , Peptide Synthases/metabolism
7.
Biochemistry ; 39(16): 4729-39, 2000 Apr 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10769129

ABSTRACT

The six domain, 229 kDa HMWP2 subunit of the Yersinia pestis yersiniabactin (Ybt) synthetase has been expressed in soluble, full-length form in E. coli as a C-terminal His8 construct at low growth temperatures and with attenuated induction. All six domains of this nonribosomal peptide synthetase subunit, three phosphopantetheinylatable carrier protein domains (ArCP, PCP1, PCP2), one adenylation (A) domain, and two cyclization domains (Cy1, Cy2), have been assayed and are functional. Mutants that convert the phosphopantetheinylatable serine residue to alanine in each of the carrier protein domains accumulate acyl-S-enzyme intermediates upstream of the blocked apo carrier protein site. The ArCP mutant cannot be salicylated by the adenylation protein YbtE; the PCP1 mutant releases salicyl-cysteine from thiolysis of the Sal-S-ArCP intermediate; and the PCP2 mutant releases hydroxyphenyl-thiazolinyl-cysteine from the HPT-S-PCP1 acyl enzyme intermediate, all of which demonstrates processivity and directionality of chain growth. Restoration of the ArCP mutant's function was accomplished with the native ArCP fragment added in trans. The wild-type HMWP2 subunit accumulates hydroxyphenyl-4, 2-bithiazolinyl-S-enzyme at its most downstream PCP2 carrier site, presumably for transfer to the next subunit, HMWP1. The A domain was found to activate and transfer to PCP1 and PCP2 not only the natural L-Cys but also S-2-aminobutyrate, L-beta-chloroalanine, and L-Ser, enabling testing of the substrate specificity of the Cy domain. Probes of Cy domain function include mutagenesis of the Cy1 domain's conserved signature motif DX(4)DX(2)S to show that both D residues but not the S are crucial for both amide bond formation and heterocyclization. Also the Cy1 domain would accept an alternate upstream electrophilic donor substrate (2,3-dihydroxybenzoyl-S-ArCP) but would not process any of the three alternate downstream nucleophilic acceptors in place of Cys-S-PCP1, even for the amide bond-forming step in chain elongation.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Coenzyme A Ligases , Yersinia pestis/enzymology , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Amino Acid Motifs , Amino Acid Sequence , Amino Acid Substitution/genetics , Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/isolation & purification , Carrier Proteins/chemistry , Carrier Proteins/genetics , Carrier Proteins/isolation & purification , Carrier Proteins/metabolism , Catalysis , Diphosphates/metabolism , Genetic Complementation Test , Holoenzymes/chemistry , Holoenzymes/genetics , Holoenzymes/metabolism , Hydrolysis , Iron-Binding Proteins , Kinetics , Molecular Weight , Pantetheine/analogs & derivatives , Pantetheine/metabolism , Peptide Synthases/chemistry , Peptide Synthases/genetics , Peptide Synthases/isolation & purification , Peptide Synthases/metabolism , Periplasmic Binding Proteins , Plasmids/genetics , Point Mutation/genetics , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/isolation & purification , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Salicylic Acid/metabolism , Substrate Specificity , Yersinia pestis/genetics
8.
Biochemistry ; 39(9): 2297-306, 2000 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10694396

ABSTRACT

The adenylation (A) domain of the Yersinia pestis nonribosomal peptide synthetase that biosynthesizes the siderophore yersiniabactin (Ybt) activates three molecules of L-cysteine and covalently aminoacylates the phosphopantetheinyl (P-pant) thiols on three peptidyl carrier protein (PCP) domains embedded in the two synthetase subunits, two in cis (PCP1, PCP2) in subunit HMWP2 and one in trans (PCP3) in subunit HMWP1. This two-step process of activation and loading by the A domain is analogous to the operation of the aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases in ribosomal peptide synthesis. Adenylation domain specificity for the first step of reversible aminoacyl adenylate formation was assessed with the amino acid-dependent [(32)P]-PP(i)-ATP exchange assay to show that S-2-aminobutyrate and beta-chloro-L-alanine were alternate substrates. The second step of A domain catalysis, capture of the bound aminoacyl adenylate by the P-pant-SH of the PCP domains, was assayed both by catalytic release of PP(i) and by covalent aminoacylation of radiolabeled substrates on either the PCP1 fragment of HMWP2 or the PCP3-thioesterase double domain fragment of HMWP1. There was little selectivity for capture of each of the three adenylates by PCP3 in the second step, arguing against any hydrolytic proofreading of incorrect substrates by the A domain. The holo-PCP3 domain accelerated PP(i) release and catalytic turnover by 100-200-fold over the leak rate (<1 min(-1)) of aminoacyl adenylates into solution while PCP1 in trans had only about a 5-fold effect. Free pantetheine could capture cysteinyl adenylate with a 25-50-fold increase in k(cat) while CoA was 10-fold less effective. The K(m) of free pantetheine (30-50 mM) was 3 orders of magnitude larger than that of PCP3-TE (10-25 microM), indicating a net 10(4) greater catalytic efficiency for transfer to the P-pant arm of PCP3 by the Ybt synthetase A domain, relative to P-pant alone.


Subject(s)
Adenosine Triphosphate/chemistry , Carrier Proteins/chemistry , Peptide Synthases/chemistry , Phenols , Siderophores/chemistry , Thiazoles , Transfer RNA Aminoacylation , Acylation , Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins , Bacterial Proteins/biosynthesis , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/isolation & purification , Cloning, Molecular , Coenzyme A/chemistry , Cysteine/chemistry , Diphosphates/chemistry , Holoenzymes/chemistry , Iron-Binding Proteins , Pantetheine/chemistry , Peptide Fragments/biosynthesis , Peptide Fragments/genetics , Peptide Fragments/isolation & purification , Periplasmic Binding Proteins , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Substrate Specificity , Thiolester Hydrolases/chemistry , Thiolester Hydrolases/genetics , Yersinia pestis/enzymology
9.
Biochemistry ; 38(45): 14941-54, 1999 Nov 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10555976

ABSTRACT

Three Pseudomonas aeruginosa proteins involved in biogenesis of the nonribosomal peptide siderophore pyochelin, PchD, PchE, and PchF, have been expressed in and purified from Escherichia coli and are found to produce the tricyclic acid hydroxyphenyl-thiazolyl-thiazolinyl-carboxylic acid (HPTT-COOH), an advanced intermediate containing the aryl-4,2-bis-heterocyclic skeleton of the bithiazoline class of siderophores. The three proteins contain three adenylation domains, one specific for salicylate activation and two specific for cysteine activation, and three carrier protein domains (two in PchE and one in PchF) that undergo posttranslational priming with phosphopantetheine to enable covalent tethering of salicyl and cysteinyl moieties as acyl-S-enzyme intermediates. Two cyclization domains (Cy1 in PchE and Cy2 in PchF) create the two amide linkages in the elongating chains and the cyclodehydrations of acylcysteine moieties into thiazolinyl rings. The ninth domain, the most downstream domain in PchF, is the chain-terminating, acyl-S-enzyme thioester hydrolase that releases the HPTT-S-enzyme intermediate to the observed tandem bis-heterocyclic acid product. A PchF-thioesterase domain active site double mutant fails to turn over, but a monocyclic hydroxyphenyl-thiazolinyl-cysteine (HPT-Cys) product continues to be released from PchE, allowing assignment of the cascade of acyl-S-enzyme intermediates involved in initiation, elongation, and termination steps.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Iron Chelating Agents/metabolism , Peptide Synthases/metabolism , Phenols/metabolism , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/metabolism , Siderophores/metabolism , Thiazoles , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Catalysis , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Cysteine/metabolism , Diphosphates/metabolism , Pantothenic Acid/analogs & derivatives , Pantothenic Acid/metabolism , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Salicylates/metabolism , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization
10.
Curr Opin Chem Biol ; 3(5): 598-606, 1999 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10508662

ABSTRACT

Progress in sequence analysis of biosynthetic gene clusters encoding polyketides and nonribosomal peptides and in the reconstitution of in vitro activities continues to reveal new insights into the growth of these natural products' acyl chains, which have been revealed as a series of elongating, covalent, acyl enzyme intermediates on their multimodular scaffolds. Studies that focus on the three stages of natural product biosynthesis - initiation, elongation, and termination - have yielded crucial information on monomer substrate specificity, domain and module portability, and product release mechanisms, all of which are important not only for an understanding of this exquisite enzymatic machinery, but also for the rational construction of new, functional synthetases and synthases that are a goal of combinatorial biosynthesis.


Subject(s)
Multienzyme Complexes/metabolism , Acylation , Enzyme Activation , Models, Chemical , Peptide Chain Elongation, Translational , Peptide Chain Initiation, Translational , Peptide Chain Termination, Translational
11.
Chem Biol ; 5(11): 631-45, 1998 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9831524

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Many pathogenic bacteria secrete iron-chelating siderophores as virulence factors in the iron-limiting environments of their vertebrate hosts to compete for ferric iron. Mycobacterium tuberculosis mycobactins are mixed polyketide/nonribosomal peptides that contain a hydroxyaryloxazoline cap and two N-hydroxyamides that together create a high-affinity site for ferric ion. The mycobactin structure is analogous to that of the yersiniabactin and vibriobactin siderophores from the bacteria that cause plague and cholera, respectively. RESULTS: A ten-gene cluster spanning 24 kilobases of the M. tuberculosis genome, designated mbtA-J, contains the core components necessary for mycobactin biogenesis. The gene products MbtB, MbtE and MbtF are proposed to be peptide synthetases, MbtC and MbtD polyketide synthases, MbtI an isochorismate synthase that provides a salicylate activated by MbtA, and MbtG a required hydroxylase. An aryl carrier protein (ArCP) domain is encoded in mbtB, and is probably the site of siderophore chain initiation. Overproduction and purification of the mbtB ArCP domain and MbtA in Escherichia coli allowed validation of the mycobactin initiation hypothesis, as sequential action of PptT (a phosphopantetheinyl transferase) and MbtA (a salicyl-AMP ligase) resulted in the mbtB ArCP domain being activated as salicyl-S-ArCP. CONCLUSIONS: Mycobactins are produced in M. tuberculosis using a polyketide synthase/nonribosomal peptide synthetase strategy. The mycobactin gene cluster has organizational homologies to the yersiniabactin and enterobactin synthetase genes. Enzymatic targets for inhibitor design and therapeutic intervention are suggested by the similar ferric-ion ligation strategies used in the siderophores from Mycobacteria, Yersinia and E. coli pathogens.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins , Multigene Family/genetics , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/enzymology , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/genetics , Oxazoles/metabolism , Siderophores/biosynthesis , Siderophores/genetics , Carrier Proteins/biosynthesis , Chorismic Acid/metabolism , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Cloning, Molecular , Coenzyme A/metabolism , Cyclohexenes , DNA, Bacterial/biosynthesis , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Iron/metabolism , Mass Spectrometry , Peptide Synthases/biosynthesis , Peptide Synthases/genetics
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