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1.
Mankin  A. S. 《Molecular Biology》2001,35(4):509-520
In spite of decades of research, our understanding of the principles of antibiotic binding to the ribosome and the mechanisms of drug action remains only fragmentary. Recent progress in biochemical and genetic studies of some old and new antibiotics and the availability of high-resolution structures of the ribosome subunits allows mapping the antibiotic-binding sites at atomic resolution. In this review, interaction of three groups of antibiotics with the ribosome and the mechanisms of the drug action are discussed, considering the data used to map the binding sites of the new macrolide derivatives, ketolides, a novel clinically important antibiotic linezolid, and a still experimental drug evernimicin.  相似文献   

2.
The ribosome is one of the main antibiotic targets in the cell. Recent years brought important insights into the mode of interaction of antibiotics with the ribosome and mechanisms of antibiotic action. Ribosome crystallography provided a detailed view of the interactions between antibiotics and rRNA. Advances in biochemical techniques let us better understand how the binding of small organic molecules can interfere with functions of an enzyme four orders of magnitude larger than the inhibitor. These and other achievements paved the way for the development of new ribosome-targeting antibiotics, some of which have already entered medical practice. The recent progress, problems and new directions of research of ribosome-targeting antibiotics are discussed in this review.  相似文献   

3.
Parmeggiani A  Nissen P 《FEBS letters》2006,580(19):4576-4581
Elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu), the carrier of aa-tRNA to the mRNA-programmed ribosome, is the target of four families of antibiotics of unrelated structure, of which the action is supported by two basic mechanisms. Kirromycin and enacyloxin block EF-Tu.GDP on the ribosome; pulvomycin and GE2270 A inhibit the interaction of EF-Tu.GTP with aa-tRNA. The crystallographic analysis has unveiled the structural background of their actions, explaining how antibiotics of unrelated structures and binding modes and sites can employ similar mechanism of action. The selective similarities and differences of their binding sites and the induced EF-Tu conformations make understand how nature can affect the activities of a complex regulatory enzyme by means of low-molecular compounds, and have proposed a suitable approach for drug design.  相似文献   

4.
Paromomycin binds specifically to a single type of binding site on the 70-S streptomycin-sensitive Escherichia coli ribosome. This site is different from that of dihydrostreptomycin since paromomycin binds to streptomycin-resistant ribosomes and sine dihydrostreptomycin does not compete for paromomycin binding. Paromomycin binding, unlike dihydrostreptomycin binding, is independent of changes in ribosome concentration but influenced by magnesium ion concentration. Moreover, paromomycin does not bind to the 30-S subunit of the streptomycin-sensitive ribosome, except in the presence of dihydrostreptomycin, which probably induces the conformational changes necessary for a paromomycin binding site. This induction does not occur with streptomycin-resistant ribosomes. Neither antibiotic binds to the 50-S subunit. In general, binding of the one antibiotic increases the number of sites available for binding of the other. Both antibiotics exhibit marked non-specific binding at high antibiotic/ribosome ratios. Competition studies have enabled the classification of other aminoglycosides according to their ability to compete for the paromomycin and dihydrostreptomycin binding sites. Derivatives structurally related to paromomycin compete for its binding, the degree of competition being related to antibacterial activity, but do not compete for dihydrostreptomycin binding; they, on the contrary, increase the number of dihydrostreptomycin binding sites. Neither gentamicin nor kanamycin derivatives, which induce a high level of misreading, nor kasugamycin and spectinomycin, which do not induce misreading, compete for paromomycin or dihydrostreptomycin binding sites. Other sites may be involved in the binding of these aminoglycosides and in inducing misreading.  相似文献   

5.
Two antibiotic resistance peptides, the E-peptide (MRLFV) and the K-peptide (MRFFV) conferring macrolide and ketolide resistance, respectively, were studied in the complex state with bacterial Staphylococcus aureus ribosomes. Interactions of antibiotic resistance peptides with ribosomes were investigated using two-dimensional transferred nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy (TRNOESY), suggesting that the peptide-ribosome interaction was associated with the low-affinity binding level. K-Peptide displayed a significantly better response in TRNOEs NMR experiments, in agreement with a better overall antibiotic activity of ketolides. This difference highlights a mimetic effect displayed by the E- and K-peptides. This study shows that conformation plays an essential role for the affinity binding site and, thus, for the resistance mechanism. Specific conformations were preferred in the bound state; their superimposition exhibited a similar cyclic peptidyl chain, while the side chain region varies. The F4 phenyl moiety in E-peptide has moved out of the turn region compared to its folding in the ketolide resistance peptide. In the K-peptide binding surface, the F4 aromatic chain is maintained by stacking with the guanidyl group of the R2 residue providing a particular hydrophobic and globular fragment, which may be important for the ketolide resistance peptide mode of action. Additionally, T(2) (CPMG) measurements were used to characterize equilibrium binding of antibiotic resistance peptides to bacterial ribosomes. The results bring to the fore E- and K-peptide competition with antibiotics for binding to the ribosomes. Their specific interaction and their competitive effects reveal a novel aspect of interaction of resistance peptides with ribosomes and suggest new insights about their mode of action. The resistance mechanism may imply two steps, a competitive effect of the resistance peptide for the macrolide (or ketolide) binding site followed by a "bottle brush" effect in which the drug and the peptide are driven out their binding site on the ribosome.  相似文献   

6.
The prokaryotic ribosome is an important target of antibiotic action. We determined the X-ray structure of the aminoglycoside kasugamycin (Ksg) in complex with the Escherichia coli 70S ribosome at 3.5-A resolution. The structure reveals that the drug binds within the messenger RNA channel of the 30S subunit between the universally conserved G926 and A794 nucleotides in 16S ribosomal RNA, which are sites of Ksg resistance. To our surprise, Ksg resistance mutations do not inhibit binding of the drug to the ribosome. The present structural and biochemical results indicate that inhibition by Ksg and Ksg resistance are closely linked to the structure of the mRNA at the junction of the peptidyl-tRNA and exit-tRNA sites (P and E sites).  相似文献   

7.
Oxazolidinone antibiotics, an important new class of synthetic antibacterials, inhibit protein synthesis by interfering with ribosomal function. The exact site and mechanism of oxazolidinone action has not been elucidated. Although genetic data pointed to the ribosomal peptidyltransferase as the primary site of drug action, some biochemical studies conducted in vitro suggested interaction with different regions of the ribosome. These inconsistent observations obtained in vivo and in vitro have complicated the understanding of oxazolidinone action. To localize the site of oxazolidinone action in the living cell, we have cross-linked a photoactive drug analog to its target in intact, actively growing Staphylococcus aureus. The oxazolidinone cross-linked specifically to 23 S rRNA, tRNA, and two polypeptides. The site of cross-linking to 23 S rRNA was mapped to the universally conserved A-2602. Polypeptides cross-linked were the ribosomal protein L27, whose N terminus may reach the peptidyltransferase center, and LepA, a protein homologous to translation factors. Only ribosome-associated LepA, but not free protein, was cross-linked, indicating that LepA was cross-linked by the ribosome-bound antibiotic. The evidence suggests that a specific oxazolidinone binding site is formed in the translating ribosome in the immediate vicinity of the peptidyltransferase center.  相似文献   

8.
Polacek N  Swaney S  Shinabarger D  Mankin AS 《Biochemistry》2002,41(39):11602-11610
The key enzymatic activity of the ribosome is catalysis of peptide bond formation. This reaction is a target for many clinically important antibiotics. However, the molecular mechanisms of the peptidyl transfer reaction, the catalytic contribution of the ribosome, and the mechanisms of antibiotic action are still poorly understood. Here we describe a novel, simple, convenient, and sensitive method for monitoring peptidyl transferase activity (SPARK). In this method, the ribosomal peptidyl transferase forms a peptide bond between two ligands, one of which is tritiated whereas the other is biotin-tagged. Transpeptidation results in covalent attachment of the biotin moiety to a tritiated compound. The amount of the reaction product is then directly quantified using the scintillation proximity assay technology: binding of the tritiated radioligand to the commercially available streptavidin-coated beads causes excitation of the bead-embedded scintillant, resulting in detection of radioactivity. The reaction is readily inhibited by known antibiotics, inhibitors of peptide bond formation. The method we developed is amenable to simple automation which makes it useful for screening for new antibiotics. The method is useful for different types of ribosomal research. Using this method, we investigated the effect of mutations at a universally conserved nucleotide of the active site of 23S rRNA, A2602 (Escherichia coli numbering), on the peptidyl transferase activity of the ribosome. The activities of the in vitro reconstituted mutant subunits, though somewhat reduced, were comparable with those of the subunits assembled with the wild-type 23S rRNA, indicating that A2602 mutations do not abolish the ability of the ribosome to catalyze peptide bond formation. Similar results were obtained with double mutants carrying mutations at A2602 and another universally conserved nucleotide in the peptidyl transferase center, A2451. The obtained results agree with our previous conclusion that the ribosome accelerates peptide bond formation primarily through entropic rather than chemical catalysis.  相似文献   

9.
Members of the ATP‐binding cassette F (ABC‐F) proteins confer resistance to several classes of clinically important antibiotics through ribosome protection. Recent structures of two ABC‐F proteins, Pseudomonas aeruginosa MsrE and Bacillus subtilis VmlR bound to ribosome have shed light onto the ribosome protection mechanism whereby drug resistance is mediated by the antibiotic resistance domain (ARD) connecting the two ATP binding domains. ARD of the E site bound MsrE and VmlR extends toward the drug binding region within the peptidyl transferase center (PTC) and leads to conformational changes in the P site tRNA acceptor stem, the PTC, and the drug binding site causing the release of corresponding drugs. The structural similarities and differences of the MsrE and VmlR structures likely highlight an universal ribosome protection mechanism employed by antibiotic resistance (ARE) ABC‐F proteins. The variable ARD domains enable this family of proteins to adapt the protection mechanism for several classes of ribosome‐targeting drugs. ARE ABC‐F genes have been found in numerous pathogen genomes and multi‐drug resistance conferring plasmids. Collectively they mediate resistance to a broader range of antimicrobial agents than any other group of resistance proteins and play a major role in clinically significant drug resistance in pathogenic bacteria. Here, we review the recent structural and biochemical findings on these emerging resistance proteins, offering an update of the molecular basis and implications for overcoming ABC‐F conferred drug resistance.  相似文献   

10.
The ribosome is the main target for antibiotics that inhibit protein biosynthesis. Despite the chemical diversity of the known antibiotics that affect functions of the large ribosomal subunit, these drugs act on only a few sites corresponding to some of the known functional centers. We have used a genetic approach for identifying structurally and functionally critical sites in the ribosome that can be used as new antibiotic targets. By using randomly mutagenized rRNA genes, we mapped rRNA sites where nucleotide alterations impair the ribosome function or assembly and lead to a deleterious phenotype. A total of 77 single-point deleterious mutations were mapped in 23 S rRNA and ranked according to the severity of their deleterious phenotypes. Many of the mutations mapped to familiar functional sites that are targeted by known antibiotics. However, a number of mutations were located in previously unexplored regions. The distribution of the mutations in the spatial structure of the ribosome showed a strong bias, with the strongly deleterious mutations being mainly localized at the interface of the large subunit and the mild ones on the solvent side. Five sites where deleterious mutations tend to cluster within discrete rRNA elements were identified as potential new antibiotic targets. One of the sites, the conserved segment of helix 38, was studied in more detail. Although the ability of the mutant 50 S subunits to associate with 30 S subunits was impaired, the lethal effect of mutations in this rRNA element was unrelated to its function as an intersubunit bridge. Instead, mutations in this region had a profound deleterious effect on the ribosome assembly.  相似文献   

11.
Several classes of clinically important antibiotics target the bacterial ribosome, where they interfere with microbial protein synthesis. Structural studies of the interaction of antibiotics with the ribosome have revealed that these small molecules recognize predominantly the rRNA components. Over the past two years, three-dimensional structures of ribosome-antibiotic complexes have been determined, providing a detailed picture of the binding sites and mechanism of action of antibacterials, including 'blockbuster' drugs such as the macrolides. Structure-based approaches have come to fruition that comprise the design and crystal structure analysis of novel semi-synthetic antibiotics that target the ribosome decoding site.  相似文献   

12.
Rational structure-based drug design has been applied to the antibiotic thiostrepton, in an attempt to overcome some of its' limitations. The identification of a proposed binding fragment allowed construction of a number of key fragments, which were derivatised to generate a library of potential antibiotics. These were then evaluated to determine their ability to bind to the L11 binding domain of the prokaryotic ribosome and inhibit bacterial protein translation.  相似文献   

13.
Ennis, Herbert L. (St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tenn.). Inhibition of protein synthesis by polypeptide antibiotics. II. In vitro protein synthesis. J. Bacteriol. 90:1109-1119. 1965.-This investigation has shown that the polypeptide antibiotics of the PA 114, vernamycin, and streptogramin complexes are potent inhibitors of the synthetic polynucleotide-stimulated incorporation of amino acids into hot trichloroacetic acid-insoluble peptide. The antibiotics inhibited the transfer of amino acid from aminoacyl-soluble ribonucleic acid (s-RNA) to peptide. The A component of the antibiotic complex was active alone in inhibiting in vitro protein synthesis, whereas the B fraction was totally inactive. However, the A component, when in combination with the B component, gave a greater degree of inhibition than that observed with the A fraction alone. On the other hand, the endogenous incorporation of amino acid was much less susceptible to inhibition than the incorporation of the corresponding amino acid in a system stimulated by synthetic polynucleotide. In addition, synthesis of polyphenylalanine stimulated by polyuridylic acid was inhibited to a greater extent when the antibiotics were added before the addition of polyuridylic acid to the reaction mixture than when the antibiotics were added after the polynucleotide had a chance to attach to the ribosomes. However, the antibiotics apparently did not inhibit the binding of C(14)-polyuridylic acid or C(14)-phenylalanyl-s-RNA to ribosomes. The antibiotics did not affect the normal release of nascent protein from ribosomes and did not disturb protein synthesis by causing misreading of the genetic code. The antibiotics bind irreversibly to the ribosome, or destroy the functional identity of the ribosome. The antibiotic action is apparently a result of the competition between antibiotic and messenger RNA for a functional site(s) on the ribosome.  相似文献   

14.
Aminoglycosides are one of the most widely used and clinically important classes of antibiotics that target the ribosome. Hygromycin B is an atypical aminoglycoside antibiotic with unique structural and functional properties. Here we describe the structure of the intact Escherichia coli 70S ribosome in complex with hygromycin B. The antibiotic binds to the mRNA decoding center in the small (30S) ribosomal subunit of the 70S ribosome and induces a localized conformational change, in contrast to its effects observed in the structure of the isolated 30S ribosomal subunit in complex with the drug. The conformational change in the ribosome caused by hygromycin B binding differs from that induced by other aminoglycosides. Also, in contrast to other aminoglycosides, hygromycin B potently inhibits spontaneous reverse translocation of tRNAs and mRNA on the ribosome in vitro. These structural and biochemical results help to explain the unique mode of translation inhibition by hygromycin B.  相似文献   

15.
Fong DH  Berghuis AM 《The EMBO journal》2002,21(10):2323-2331
The misuse of antibiotics has selected for bacteria that have evolved mechanisms for evading the effects of these drugs. For aminoglycosides, a group of clinically important bactericidal antibiotics that target the A-site of the 16S ribosomal RNA, the most common mode of resistance is enzyme-catalyzed chemical modification of the drug. While aminoglycosides are structurally diverse, a single enzyme can confer resistance to many of these antibiotics. For example, the aminoglycoside kinase APH(3')-IIIa, produced by pathogenic Gram-positive bacteria such as enterococci and staphylococci, is capable of detoxifying at least 10 distinct aminoglycosides. Here we describe the crystal structures of APH(3')-IIIa in complex with ADP and kanamycin A or neomycin B. These structures reveal that the basis for this enzyme's substrate promiscuity is the presence of two alternative subsites in the antibiotic binding pocket. Furthermore, comparison between the A-site of the bacterial ribosome and APH(3')-IIIa shows that mimicry is the second major factor in dictating the substrate spectrum of APH(3')-IIIa. These results suggest a potential strategy for drug design aimed at circumventing antibiotic resistance.  相似文献   

16.
Linezolid, which targets the ribosome, is a new synthetic antibiotic that is used for treatment of infections caused by Gram-positive pathogens. Clinical resistance to linezolid, so far, has been developing only slowly and has involved exclusively target site mutations. We have discovered that linezolid resistance in a methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus hospital strain from Colombia is determined by the presence of the cfr gene whose product, Cfr methyltransferase, modifies adenosine at position 2503 in 23S rRNA in the large ribosomal subunit. The molecular model of the linezolid-ribosome complex reveals localization of A2503 within the drug binding site. The natural function of cfr likely involves protection against natural antibiotics whose site of action overlaps that of linezolid. In the chromosome of the clinical strain, cfr is linked to ermB, a gene responsible for dimethylation of A2058 in 23S rRNA. Coexpression of these two genes confers resistance to all the clinically relevant antibiotics that target the large ribosomal subunit. The association of the ermB/cfr operon with transposon and plasmid genetic elements indicates its possible mobile nature. This is the first example of clinical resistance to the synthetic drug linezolid which involves a natural resistance gene with the capability of disseminating among Gram-positive pathogenic strains.  相似文献   

17.
Bacterial growth environment strongly influences the efficacy of antibiotic treatment, with slow growth often being associated with decreased susceptibility. Yet in many cases, the connection between antibiotic susceptibility and pathogen physiology remains unclear. We show that for ribosome-targeting antibiotics acting on Escherichia coli, a complex interplay exists between physiology and antibiotic action; for some antibiotics within this class, faster growth indeed increases susceptibility, but for other antibiotics, the opposite is true. Remarkably, these observations can be explained by a simple mathematical model that combines drug transport and binding with physiological constraints. Our model reveals that growth-dependent susceptibility is controlled by a single parameter characterizing the ‘reversibility’ of ribosome-targeting antibiotic transport and binding. This parameter provides a spectrum classification of antibiotic growth-dependent efficacy that appears to correspond at its extremes to existing binary classification schemes. In these limits, the model predicts universal, parameter-free limiting forms for growth inhibition curves. The model also leads to non-trivial predictions for the drug susceptibility of a translation mutant strain of E. coli, which we verify experimentally. Drug action and bacterial metabolism are mechanistically complex; nevertheless, this study illustrates how coarse-grained models can be used to integrate pathogen physiology into drug design and treatment strategies.  相似文献   

18.
Identification of small molecular weight compounds targeting specific sites in the ribosome can accelerate development of new antibiotics and provide new tools for ribosomal research. We demonstrate here that antibiotic-size short peptides capable of inhibiting protein synthesis can be selected by using specific elements of ribosomal RNA as a target. The ‘h18’ pseudoknot encompassing residues 500-545 of the small ribosomal subunit RNA was used as a target in screening a heptapeptide phage-display library. Two of the selected peptides could efficiently interfere with both bacterial and eukaryotic translation. One of these inhibitory peptides exhibited a high-affinity binding to the isolated small ribosomal subunit (Kd of 1.1 μM). Identification of inhibitory peptides that likely target a specific rRNA structure may pave new ways for validating new antibiotic sites in the ribosome. The selected peptides can be used as a tool in search of novel site-specific inhibitors of translation.  相似文献   

19.
Elongation factor (EF-) Tu.GTP is the carrier of aminoacyl-tRNA to the programmed ribosome. Enacyloxin IIa inhibits bacterial protein synthesis by hindering the release of EF-Tu.GDP from the ribosome. The crystal structure of the Escherichia coli EF-Tu.guanylyl iminodiphosphate (GDPNP).enacyloxin IIa complex at 2.3 A resolution presented here reveals the location of the antibiotic at the interface of domains 1 and 3. The binding site overlaps that of kirromycin, an antibiotic with a structure that is unrelated to enacyloxin IIa but that also inhibits EF-Tu.GDP release. As one of the major differences, the enacyloxin IIa tail borders a hydrophobic pocket that is occupied by the longer tail of kirromycin, explaining the higher binding affinity of the latter. EF-Tu.GDPNP.enacyloxin IIa shows a disordered effector region that in the Phe-tRNAPhe.EF-Tu (Thermus aquaticus).GDPNP.enacyloxin IIa complex, solved at 3.1 A resolution, is stabilized by the interaction with tRNA. This work clarifies the structural background of the action of enacyloxin IIa and compares its properties with those of kirromycin, opening new perspectives for structure-guided design of novel antibiotics.  相似文献   

20.
Pathogenic microbes rapidly develop resistance to antibiotics. To keep ahead in the “microbial war”, extensive interdisciplinary research is needed. A primary cause of drug resistance is the overuse of antibiotics that can result in alteration of microbial permeability, alteration of drug target binding sites, induction of enzymes that destroy antibiotics (ie., beta-lactamase) and even induction of efflux mechanisms. A combination of chemical syntheses, microbiological and biochemical studies demonstrate that the known critical dependence of iron assimilation by microbes for growth and virulence can be exploited for the development of new approaches to antibiotic therapy. Iron recognition and active transport relies on the biosyntheses and use of microbe-selective iron-chelating compounds called siderophores. Our studies, and those of others, demonstrate that siderophores and analogs can be used for iron transport-mediated drug delivery (“Trojan Horse” antibiotics) and induction of iron limitation/starvation (Development of new agents to block iron assimilation). Recent extensions of the use of siderophores for the development of novel potent and selective anticancer agents are also described.  相似文献   

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