An Engineered Multimodular Enzybiotic against Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus

Development of multidrug antibiotic resistance in bacteria is a predicament encountered worldwide. Researchers are in a constant hunt to develop effective antimicrobial agents to counter these dreadful pathogenic bacteria. Here we describe a chimerically engineered multimodular enzybiotic to treat a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Life (Basel, Switzerland) Switzerland), 2021-12, Vol.11 (12), p.1384
Hauptverfasser: Manoharadas, Salim, Altaf, Mohammad, Alrefaei, Abdulwahed Fahad, Ahmad, Naushad, Althaf Hussain, Shaik, Al-Rayes, Basel F
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Development of multidrug antibiotic resistance in bacteria is a predicament encountered worldwide. Researchers are in a constant hunt to develop effective antimicrobial agents to counter these dreadful pathogenic bacteria. Here we describe a chimerically engineered multimodular enzybiotic to treat a clinical isolate of methicillin-resistant ( ). The cell wall binding domain of phage ϕ11 endolysin was replaced with a truncated and more potent cell wall binding domain from a completely unrelated protein from a different phage. The engineered enzybiotic showed strong activity against clinically relevant methicillin-resistant . In spite of a multimodular peptidoglycan cleaving catalytic domain, the engineered enzybiotic could not exhibit its activity against a veterinary isolate of . Our studies point out that novel antimicrobial proteins can be genetically engineered. Moreover, the cell wall binding domain of the engineered protein is indispensable for a strong binding and stability of the proteins.
ISSN:2075-1729
2075-1729
DOI:10.3390/life11121384