Allicin, a natural antimicrobial defence substance from garlic, inhibits DNA gyrase activity in bacteria

Allicin (diallylthiosulfinate) is a potent antimicrobial substance, produced by garlic tissues upon wounding as a defence against pathogens and pests. Allicin is a reactive sulfur species (RSS) that oxidizes accessible cysteines in glutathione and proteins. We used a differential isotopic labelling...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of medical microbiology 2020-01, Vol.310 (1), p.151359-151359, Article 151359
Hauptverfasser: Reiter, Jana, Hübbers, Anna Maria, Albrecht, Frank, Leichert, Lars Ingo Ole, Slusarenko, Alan John
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Allicin (diallylthiosulfinate) is a potent antimicrobial substance, produced by garlic tissues upon wounding as a defence against pathogens and pests. Allicin is a reactive sulfur species (RSS) that oxidizes accessible cysteines in glutathione and proteins. We used a differential isotopic labelling method (OxICAT) to identify allicin targets in the bacterial proteome. We compared the proteomes of allicin-susceptible Pseudomonas fluorescens Pf0-1 and allicin-tolerant PfAR-1 after a sublethal allicin exposure. Before exposure to allicin, proteins were in a predominantly reduced state, with approximately 77% of proteins showing less than 20% cysteine oxidation. Protein oxidation increased after exposure to allicin, and only 50% of proteins from allicin-susceptible Pf0-1, but 65% from allicin-tolerant PfAR-1, remained less than 20% oxidised. DNA gyrase was identified as an allicin target. Cys433 in DNA gyrase subunit A (GyrA) was approximately 6% oxidized in untreated bacteria. After allicin treatment the degree of Cys433 oxidation increased to 55% in susceptible Pf0-1 but only to 10% in tolerant PfAR-1. Allicin inhibited E. coli DNA gyrase activity in vitro in the same concentration range as nalidixic acid. Purified PfAR-1 DNA gyrase was inhibited to greater extent by allicin in vitro than the Pf0-1 enzyme. Substituting PfAR-1 GyrA into Pf0-1 rendered the exchange mutants more susceptible to allicin than the Pf0-1 wild type. Taken together, these results suggest that GyrA was protected from oxidation in vivo in the allicin-tolerant PfAR-1 background, rather than the PfAR-1 GyrA subunit being intrinsically less susceptible to oxidation by allicin than the Pf0-1 GyrA subunit. DNA gyrase is a target for medicinally important antibiotics; thus, allicin and its analogues may have potential to be developed as gyrase inhibitors, either alone or in conjunction with other therapeutics.
ISSN:1438-4221
1618-0607
DOI:10.1016/j.ijmm.2019.151359