The oxazolidinones are a new class of synthetic antibiotics with good activity against gram-positive pathogenic bacteria. Experiments with a susceptible Escherichia coli strain, UC6782, demonstrated that in vivo protein synthesis was inhibited by both eperezolid (formerly U-100592) and linezolid (formerly U-100766). Both linezolid and eperezolid were potent inhibitors of cell-free transcription-translation in E. coli, exhibiting 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC50s) of 1.8 and 2.5 microM, respectively. The ability to demonstrate inhibition of in vitro translation directed by phage MS2 RNA was greatly dependent upon the amount of RNA added to the assay. For eperezolid, 128 microg of RNA per ml produced an IC50 of 50 microM whereas a concentration of 32 microg/ml yielded an IC50 of 20 microM. Investigating lower RNA template concentrations in linezolid inhibition experiments revealed that 32 and 8 microg of MS2 phage RNA per ml produced IC50s of 24 and 15 microM, respectively. This phenomenon was shared by the translation initiation inhibitor kasugamycin but not by streptomycin. Neither oxazolidinone inhibited the formation of N-formylmethionyl-tRNA, elongation, or termination reactions of bacterial translation. The oxazolidinones appear to inhibit bacterial translation at the initiation phase of protein synthesis.
We describe the isolation and analysis of an Escherichia coli gene, dppA, and its role in dipeptide transport. dppA maps near min 79 and encodes a protein (DppA) that has regions of amino acid similarity with a peptide-binding protein from Salmonella typhimurium (OppA). Like OppA, DppA is found in the periplasmic space and thus is most likely a dipeptide-binding protein. Insertional inactivation of dppA results in the inability of a proline auxotroph to utilize Pro-Gly as a proline source. dppA-dependent Pro-Gly utilization does not require any of the three major proline transport systems, demonstrating that DppA is not simply a dipeptidase. An in vivo competition assay was used to show that DppA is probably involved in the transport of dipeptides other than Pro-Gly. Transcription of dppA is repressed by the presence of casamino acids, suggesting that the cell alters its dipeptide transport capabilities in response to an environmental signal.
Eukaryotic mRNAs are modified at the 5 end with a cap structure. In fungal cells, the formation of the mRNA cap structure is catalyzed by three enzymes: triphosphatase, guanylyltransferase, and methyltransferase. Fungal capping enzymes have been proposed to be good antifungal targets because they differ significantly from their human counterparts and the genes encoding these enzymes are essential in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In the present study, Candida albicans null mutants were constructed for both the mRNA triphosphatase-encoding gene (CET1) and the mRNA methyltransferase encoding gene (CCM1), proving that these genes are not essential in C. albicans. Heterozygous deletions were generated, but no null mutants were isolated for the guanylyltransferase-encoding gene (CGT1), indicating that this gene probably is essential in C. albicans. Whereas these results indicate that Cet1p and Ccm1p are not ideal molecular targets for development of anticandidal drugs, they do raise questions about the capping of mRNA and translation initiation in this fungus. Southern blot analysis of genomic DNA indicates that there are not redundant genes for CET1 and CCM1 and analysis of mRNA cap structures indicate there are not alternative pathways compensating for the function of CET1 or CCM1 in the null mutants. Instead, it appears that C. albicans can survive with modified mRNA cap structures.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.