Small organic molecules that inhibit functional bacterial
amyloid
fibers, curli, are promising new antibiotics. Here we investigated
the mechanism by which the ring-fused 2-pyridone FN075 inhibits fibrillation
of the curli protein CsgA. Using a variety of biophysical techniques,
we found that FN075 promotes CsgA to form off-pathway, non-amyloidogenic
oligomeric species. In light of the generic properties of amyloids,
we tested whether FN075 would also affect the fibrillation reaction
of human α-synuclein, an amyloid-forming protein involved in
Parkinson’s disease. Surprisingly, FN075 stimulates α-synuclein
amyloid fiber formation as measured by thioflavin T emission, electron
microscopy (EM), and atomic force microscopy (AFM). NMR data on 15N-labeled α-synuclein show that upon FN075 addition,
α-synuclein oligomers with 7 nm radius form in which the C-terminal
40 residues remain disordered and solvent exposed. The polypeptides
in these oligomers contain β-like secondary structure, and the
oligomers are detectable by AFM, EM, and size-exclusion chromatography
(SEC). Taken together, FN075 triggers oligomer formation of both proteins:
in the case of CsgA, the oligomers do not proceed to fibers, whereas
for α-synuclein, the oligomers are poised to rapidly form fibers.
We conclude that there is a fine balance between small-molecule inhibition
and templation that depends on protein chemistry.
SUMMARY
Enteric bacteria assemble functional amyloid fibers, curli, on their surfaces that share structural and biochemical properties with disease-associated amyloids. Here, we test rationally designed 2-pyridone compounds for their ability to alter amyloid formation of the major curli subunit CsgA. We identified several compounds that discourage CsgA amyloid formation and several compounds that accelerate CsgA amyloid formation. The ability of inhibitor compounds to stop growing CsgA fibers was compared to the same property of the CsgA chaperone, CsgE. CsgE blocked CsgA amyloid assembly and arrested polymerization when added to actively polymerizing fibers. Additionally, CsgE and the 2-pyridone inhibitors prevented biofilm formation by Escherichia coli at the air-liquid interface of a static culture. We demonstrate that curli amyloid assembly and curli-dependent biofilm formation can be modulated not only by protein chaperones, but also by “chemical chaperones.”
Bioactive compound design based on natural product (NP) structure may be limited because of partial coverage of NP‐like chemical space and biological target space. These limitations can be overcome by combining NP‐centered strategies with fragment‐based compound design through combination of NP‐derived fragments to afford structurally unprecedented “pseudo‐natural products” (pseudo‐NPs). The design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of a collection of indomorphan pseudo‐NPs that combine biosynthetically unrelated indole‐ and morphan‐alkaloid fragments are described. Indomorphane derivative Glupin was identified as a potent inhibitor of glucose uptake by selectively targeting and upregulating glucose transporters GLUT‐1 and GLUT‐3. Glupin suppresses glycolysis, reduces the levels of glucose‐derived metabolites, and attenuates the growth of various cancer cell lines. Our findings underscore the importance of dual GLUT‐1 and GLUT‐3 inhibition to efficiently suppress tumor cell growth and the cellular rescue mechanism, which counteracts glucose scarcity.
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