Degradation-resistant trehalose analogues block utilization of trehalose by hypervirulent Clostridioides difficile

Trehalose is used as an additive in thousands of foods, cosmetics, and pharmaceutical products, and it is being investigated as a therapeutic for multiple human diseases. However, its ability to be used as a carbon source by microbes is a concern, as highlighted by the recent finding that trehalose...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemical communications (Cambridge, England) England), 2019-04, Vol.55 (34), p.5009-5012
Hauptverfasser: Danielson, Noah D, Collins, James, Stothard, Alicyn I, Dong, Qing Qing, Kalera, Karishma, Woodruff, Peter J, DeBosch, Brian J, Britton, Robert A, Swarts, Benjamin M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Trehalose is used as an additive in thousands of foods, cosmetics, and pharmaceutical products, and it is being investigated as a therapeutic for multiple human diseases. However, its ability to be used as a carbon source by microbes is a concern, as highlighted by the recent finding that trehalose can be metabolized by and potentially enhance the virulence of epidemic Clostridioides difficile. Here, we show that trehalose analogues designed to resist enzymatic degradation are incapable of being used as carbon sources by C. difficile. Furthermore, we demonstrate that trehalose analogues, but not the known trehalase inhibitor validamycin A, inhibit native trehalose utilization by hypervirulent C. difficile. Thus, degradation-resistant trehalose analogues are valuable as trehalase inhibitors and as surrogates for or co-additives with trehalose in applications where enzymatic breakdown is a concern.
ISSN:1359-7345
1364-548X
1364-548X
DOI:10.1039/c9cc01300h