Abstract

Lys234 is one of the residues present in class A β-lactamases that is under selective pressure due to antibiotic use. Located adjacent to proton shuttle residue Ser130, it is suggested to play a role in proton transfer during catalysis of the antibiotics. The mechanism underpinning how substitutions in this position modulate inhibitor efficiency and substrate specificity leading to drug resistance is unclear. The K234R substitution identified in several inhibitor-resistant β-lactamase variants is associated with decreased potency of the inhibitor clavulanic acid, which is used in combination with amoxicillin to overcome β-lactamase-mediated antibiotic resistance. Here we show that for CTX-M-14 β-lactamase, whereas Lys234 is required for hydrolysis of cephalosporins such as cefotaxime, either lysine or arginine is sufficient for hydrolysis of ampicillin. Further, by determining the acylation and deacylation rates for cefotaxime hydrolysis, we show that both rates are fast, and neither is rate-limiting. The K234R substitution causes a 1500-fold decrease in the cefotaxime acylation rate but a 5-fold increase in kcat for ampicillin, suggesting that the K234R enzyme is a good penicillinase but a poor cephalosporinase due to slow acylation. Structural results suggest that the slow acylation by the K234R enzyme is due to a conformational change in Ser130, and this change also leads to decreased inhibition potency of clavulanic acid. Because other inhibitor resistance mutations also act through changes at Ser130 and such changes drastically reduce cephalosporin but not penicillin hydrolysis, we suggest that clavulanic acid paired with an oxyimino-cephalosporin rather than penicillin would impede the evolution of resistance.

Highlights

  • B-Lactam antibiotics are among the most often used agents for treatment of bacterial infections

  • To gain a mechanistic understanding of how Lys234 and its various substitutions differentially alter CTX-M b-lactamase substrate specificity and the associated resistance profile, we examined the sequence requirements at position 234 for penicillin and cephalosporin hydrolysis using codon randomization mutagenesis, which revealed that lysine is required for cephalosporin hydrolysis, whereas either lysine or arginine is consistent with penicillin hydrolysis

  • These findings suggest that clavulanic acid should be paired with an oxyimino-cephalosporin rather than a penicillin to slow the evolution of resistance because mutations that alter the presence or position of Ser130 block cephalosporin hydrolysis

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Summary

Introduction

B-Lactam antibiotics are among the most often used agents for treatment of bacterial infections. Kinetics experiments revealed a 1,500-fold reduced acylation rate for the K234R enzyme, consistent with disruption of the Ser130-mediated protonation of the b-lactam leaving group nitrogen.

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