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Broadening the Spectrum of β-Lactam Antibiotics through Inhibition of Signal Peptidase Type I

Authors :
John W. Phillips
Xin Gu
Mihai Petcu
Molly M. Lin
Ronald E. Painter
Michel Gallant
Lynn Miesel
Kathryn Skorey
Kenneth E. Wilson
David Claveau
Liliana L. Benton-Perdomo
Kathleen Deschamps
Christopher M. Tan
Katherine Young
Andrew Galgoci
John Tam
Christian Lebeau-Jacob
Alexandre Caron
Young-Whan Park
Suzy Lee
Simon Wong
Patrick Beaulieu
Craig A. Parish
Aimie M. Ogawa
Josiane Lafleur
Alex G. Therien
Nancy J. Kevin
Sherman T. Waddell
Robert G. K. Donald
Penny Sue Leavitt
Mary Ann Powles
Joann Huber
Anna A. Michels
Source :
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy. 56:4662-4670
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2012.

Abstract

The resistance of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) to all β-lactam classes limits treatment options for serious infections involving this organism. Our goal is to discover new agents that restore the activity of β-lactams against MRSA, an approach that has led to the discovery of two classes of natural product antibiotics, a cyclic depsipeptide (krisynomycin) and a lipoglycopeptide (actinocarbasin), which potentiate the activity of imipenem against MRSA strain COL. We report here that these imipenem synergists are inhibitors of the bacterial type I signal peptidase SpsB, a serine protease that is required for the secretion of proteins that are exported through the Sec and Tat systems. A synthetic derivative of actinocarbasin, M131, synergized with imipenem both in vitro and in vivo with potent efficacy. The in vitro activity of M131 extends to clinical isolates of MRSA but not to a methicillin-sensitive strain. Synergy is restricted to β-lactam antibiotics and is not observed with other antibiotic classes. We propose that the SpsB inhibitors synergize with β-lactams by preventing the signal peptidase-mediated secretion of proteins required for β-lactam resistance. Combinations of SpsB inhibitors and β-lactams may expand the utility of these widely prescribed antibiotics to treat MRSA infections, analogous to β-lactamase inhibitors which restored the utility of this antibiotic class for the treatment of resistant Gram-negative infections.

Details

ISSN :
10986596 and 00664804
Volume :
56
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e2bc01435a04348f73f58cdb283cf572
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/aac.00726-12