Inhibition of β-lactamase function by de novo designed peptide

Antimicrobial resistance is a great public health concern that is now described as a “silent pandemic”. The global burden of antimicrobial resistance requires new antibacterial treatments, especially for the most challenging multidrug-resistant bacteria. There are various mechanisms by which bacteri...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2023-09, Vol.18 (9), p.e0290845-e0290845
Hauptverfasser: Mishra, Arunima, Cosic, Irena, Loncarevic, Ivan, Cosic, Drasko, Fletcher, Hansel M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Antimicrobial resistance is a great public health concern that is now described as a “silent pandemic”. The global burden of antimicrobial resistance requires new antibacterial treatments, especially for the most challenging multidrug-resistant bacteria. There are various mechanisms by which bacteria develop antimicrobial resistance including expression of β-lactamase enzymes, overexpression of efflux pumps, reduced cell permeability through downregulation of porins required for β-lactam entry, or modifications in penicillin-binding proteins. Inactivation of the β-lactam antibiotics by β-lactamase enzymes is the most common mechanism of bacterial resistance to these agents. Although several effective small-molecule inhibitors of β-lactamases such as clavulanic acid and avibactam are clinically available, they act only on selected class A, C, and some class D enzymes. Currently, none of the clinically approved inhibitors can effectively inhibit Class B metallo-β-lactamases. Additionally, there is increased resistance to these inhibitors reported in several bacteria. The objective of this study is to use the Resonant Recognition Model (RRM), as a novel strategy to inhibit/modulate specific antimicrobial resistance targets. The RRM is a bio-physical approach that analyzes the distribution of energies of free electrons and posits that there is a significant correlation between the spectra of this energy distribution and related protein biological activity. In this study, we have used the RRM concept to evaluate the structure-function properties of a group of 22 β-lactamase proteins and designed 30-mer peptides with the desired RRM spectral periodicities (frequencies) to function as β-lactamase inhibitors. In contrast to the controls, our results indicate 100% inhibition of the class A β-lactamases from Escherichia coli and Enterobacter cloacae . Taken together, the RRM model can likely be utilized as a promising approach to design β-lactamase inhibitors for any specific class. This may open a new direction to combat antimicrobial resistance.
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0290845