Toxicity
challenges by antifungal arsenals and emergence of multidrug
resistance scenario has posed a serious threat to global community.
To cope up with this alarming situation, phytoactive molecules are
richest, safest, and most effective source of broad spectrum antimicrobial
compounds. In the present investigation, six phytoactive molecules
[cinnamaldehyde (CIN), epigallocatechin, vanillin, eugenol (EUG),
furanone, and epigallocatechin gallate] were studied against
Candida glabrata
and its clinical isolates. Among
these, CIN and EUG which are active components of cinnamon and clove
essential oils, respectively, exhibited maximum inhibition against
planktonic growth of
C. glabrata
at
a concentration of 64 and 128 μg mL
–1
, respectively.
These two molecules effectively inhibited and eradicated approximately
80% biofilm of
C. glabrata
and its
clinical isolates from biomaterials. CIN and EUG increased reactive
oxygen species generation, cell lysis, and ergosterol content in plasma
membrane and reduced virulence attributes (phospholipase and proteinase)
as well as catalase activity of
C. glabrata
cells. Reduction of mitochondrial membrane potential with increased
release of cytochrome
c
from mitochondria to cytosol
indicated initiation of early apoptosis in CIN- and EUG-treated
C. glabrata
cells. Transcriptional analysis showed
that multidrug transporter (
CDR1
) and ergosterol
biosynthesis genes were downregulated in the presence of CIN, while
getting upregulated in EUG-treated cells. Interestingly, genes such
as 1,3-β-glucan synthase (
FKS1
), GPI-anchored
protein (
KRE1
), and sterol importer (
AUS1
) were downregulated upon treatment of CIN/EUG. These results provided
molecular-level insights about the antifungal mechanism of CIN and
EUG against
C. glabrata
including its
resistant clinical isolate. The current data established that CIN
and EUG can be potentially formulated in new antifungal strategies.
The inflammasome is a three-component (sensor, adaptor, and effector) filamentous signaling platform that shields from multiple pathogenic infections by stimulating the proteolytical maturation of proinflammatory cytokines and pyroptotic cell death. The signaling process initiates with the detection of endogenous and/or external danger signals by specific sensors, followed by the nucleation and polymerization from sensor to downstream adaptor and then to the effector, caspase-1. Aberrant activation of inflammasomes promotes autoinflammatory diseases, cancer, neurodegeneration, and cardiometabolic disorders. Therefore, an equitable level of regulation is required to maintain the equilibrium between inflammasome activation and inhibition. Recent advancement in the structural and mechanistic understanding of inflammasome assembly potentiates the emergence of novel therapeutics against inflammasome-regulated diseases. In this review, we have comprehensively discussed the recent and updated insights into the structure of inflammasome components, their activation, interaction, mechanism of regulation, and finally, the formation of densely packed filamentous inflammasome complex that exists as micron-sized punctum in the cells and mediates the immune responses.
Bacteriophages are the most abundant and diverse biological entities on earth. Bacteriophage endolysins are unique peptidoglycan hydrolases and have huge potential as effective enzybiotics in various infectious models. T7 bacteriophage endolysin (T7L), also known as N-acetylmuramoyl-l-alanine amidase or T7 lysozyme, is a 17 kDa protein that lyses a range of Gram-negative bacteria by hydrolyzing the amide bond between N-acetylmuramoyl residues and the l-alanine of the peptidoglycan layer. Although the activity profiles of several of the T7 family members have been known for many years, the molecular basis for their pH-dependent differential activity is not clear. In this study, we explored the pH-induced structural, stability, and activity characteristics of T7L by applying a variety of biophysical techniques and protein nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Our studies established a reversible structural transition of T7L below pH 6 and the formation of a partially denatured conformation at pH 3. This low-pH conformation is thermally stable and exposed its hydrophobic pockets. Further, NMR relaxation measurements and structural analysis unraveled that T7L is highly dynamic in its native state and a network of His residues are responsible for the observed pH-dependent conformational dynamics and transitions. As bacteriophage chimeric and engineered endolysins are being developed as novel therapeutics against multiple drug resistance pathogens, we believe that our results are of great help in designing these entities as broadband antimicrobial and/or antibacterial agents.
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