New drugs are needed to treat gram-negative bacterial infections. These bacteria are protected by an outer membrane which prevents many antibiotics from reaching their cellular targets. The outer leaflet of the outer membrane contains LPS, which is responsible for creating this permeability barrier. Interfering with LPS biogenesis affects bacterial viability. We developed a cell-based screen that identifies inhibitors of LPS biosynthesis and transport by exploiting the nonessentiality of this pathway in We used this screen to find an inhibitor of MsbA, an ATP-dependent flippase that translocates LPS across the inner membrane. Treatment with the inhibitor caused mislocalization of LPS to the cell interior. The discovery of an MsbA inhibitor, which is universally conserved in all gram-negative bacteria, validates MsbA as an antibacterial target. Because our cell-based screen reports on the function of the entire LPS biogenesis pathway, it could be used to identify compounds that inhibit other targets in the pathway, which can provide insights into vulnerabilities of the gram-negative cell envelope.
Gram-negative bacteria are challenging to kill with antibiotics due to their impenetrable outer membrane containing lipopolysaccharide (LPS). The polymyxins, including colistin, are the drugs of last resort for treating Gram-negative infections. These drugs bind LPS and disrupt the outer membrane; however, their toxicity limits their usefulness. Polymyxin has been shown to synergize with many antibiotics including novobiocin, which inhibits DNA gyrase, by facilitating transport of these antibiotics across the outer membrane. Recently, we have shown that novobiocin not only inhibits DNA gyrase but also binds and stimulates LptB, the ATPase that powers LPS transport. Here, we report the synthesis of novobiocin derivatives that separate these two activities. One analog retains LptB-stimulatory activity but is unable to inhibit DNA gyrase. This analog, which is not toxic on its own, nevertheless enhances the lethality of polymyxin by binding LptB and stimulating LPS transport. Therefore, LPS transport agonism contributes substantially to novobiocin-polymyxin synergy. We also report other novobiocin analogs that inhibit DNA gyrase better than or equal to novobiocin, but bind better to LptB and therefore have even greater LptB stimulatory activity. These compounds are more potent than novobiocin when used in combination with polymyxin. Novobiocin analogs optimized for both gyrase inhibition and LPS transport agonism may allow the use of lower doses of polymyxin, increasing its efficacy and safety.
New antibiotics are needed to combat the growing problem of resistant bacterial infections. An attractive avenue toward the discovery of such next-generation therapies is to identify novel inhibitors of clinically validated targets, like cell wall biogenesis. We have therefore developed a pathway-directed whole-cell screen for small molecules that block the activity of the Rod system of Escherichia coli. This conserved multiprotein complex is required for cell elongation and the morphogenesis of rod-shaped bacteria. It is composed of cell wall synthases and membrane proteins of unknown function that are organized by filaments of the actin-like MreB protein. Our screen takes advantage of the conditional essentiality of the Rod system and the ability of the beta-lactam mecillinam (also known as amdinocillin) to cause a toxic malfunctioning of the machinery. Rod system inhibitors can therefore be identified as molecules that promote growth in the presence of mecillinam under conditions permissive for the growth of Rod– cells. A screen of ∼690,000 compounds identified 1,300 compounds that were active against E. coli. Pathway-directed screening of a majority of this subset of compounds for Rod inhibitors successfully identified eight analogs of the MreB antagonist A22. Further characterization of the A22 analogs identified showed that their antibiotic activity under conditions where the Rod system is essential was strongly correlated with their ability to suppress mecillinam toxicity. This result combined with those from additional biological studies reinforce the notion that A22-like molecules are relatively specific for MreB and suggest that the lipoprotein transport factor LolA is unlikely to be a physiologically relevant target as previously proposed.
The peptidoglycan cell wall is essential for bacterial survival. To form the cell wall, peptidoglycan glycosyltransferases (PGTs) polymerize Lipid II to make glycan strands and then those strands are crosslinked by transpeptidases (TPs). Recently, the SEDS (for shape, elongation, division, and sporulation) proteins were identified as a new class of PGTs. The SEDS protein FtsW, which produces septal peptidoglycan during cell division, is an attractive target for novel antibiotics because it is essential in virtually all bacteria. Here, we developed a time‐resolved Förster resonance energy transfer (TR‐FRET) assay to monitor PGT activity and screened a Staphylococcus aureus lethal compound library for FtsW inhibitors. We identified a compound that inhibits S. aureus FtsW in vitro. Using a non‐polymerizable Lipid II derivative, we showed that this compound competes with Lipid II for binding to FtsW. The assays described here will be useful for discovering and characterizing other PGT inhibitors.
Synthetic lethality occurs when inactivation of two genes is lethal but inactivation of either single gene is not. This phenomenon provides an opportunity for efficient compound discovery. Using differential growth screens, one can identify biologically active compounds that selectively inhibit proteins within the synthetic lethal network of any inactivated gene. Here, based purely on synthetic lethalities, we identified two compounds as the only possible inhibitors of Staphylococcus aureus lipoteichoic acid (LTA) biosynthesis from a screen of ∼230,000 compounds. Both compounds proved to inhibit the glycosyltransferase UgtP, which assembles the LTA glycolipid anchor. UgtP is required for β-lactam resistance in methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA), and the inhibitors restored sensitivity to oxacillin in a highly resistant S. aureus strain. As no other compounds were pursued as possible LTA glycolipid assembly inhibitors, this work demonstrates the extraordinary efficiency of screens that exploit synthetic lethality to discover compounds that target specified pathways. The general approach should be applicable not only to other bacteria but also to eukaryotic cells.
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