Aggregating sequences that occur in many proteins constitute weak spots of bacterial proteostasis

Aggregation is a sequence-specific process, nucleated by short aggregation-prone regions (APRs) that can be exploited to induce aggregation of proteins containing the same APR. Here, we find that most APRs are unique within a proteome, but that a small minority of APRs occur in many proteins. When a...

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Hauptverfasser: Khodaparast, L, Gallardo, R, Louros, NN, Michiels, E, Ramakrishnan, R, Ramakers, M, Claes, F, Young, L, Shahrooei, M, Wilkinson, H, Desager, M, Mengistu Tadesse, W, Nilsson, KPR, Hammarström, P, Aertsen, A, Carpentier, S, Van Eldere, J, Rousseau, F, Schymkowitz, J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aggregation is a sequence-specific process, nucleated by short aggregation-prone regions (APRs) that can be exploited to induce aggregation of proteins containing the same APR. Here, we find that most APRs are unique within a proteome, but that a small minority of APRs occur in many proteins. When aggregation is nucleated in bacteria by such frequently occurring APRs, it leads to massive and lethal inclusion body formation containing a large number of proteins. Buildup of bacterial resistance against these peptides is slow. In addition, the approach is effective against drug-resistant clinical isolates of Escherichiacoli and Acinetobacterbaumannii, reducing bacterial load in a murine bladder infection model. Our results indicate that redundant APRs are weak points of bacterial protein homeostasis and that targeting these may be an attractive antibacterial strategy.
DOI:10.1038/s41467-018-03131-0