Abstract

Acinetobacter baumannii ATCC 19606 can grow without lipooligosaccharide (LOS). Lack of LOS can result from disruption of the early lipid A biosynthetic pathway genes lpxA, lpxC or lpxD. Although LOS itself is not essential for growth of A. baumannii ATCC 19606, it was previously shown that depletion of the lipid A biosynthetic enzyme LpxK in cells inhibited growth due to the toxic accumulation of lipid A pathway intermediates. Growth of LpxK-depleted cells was restored by chemical inhibition of LOS biosynthesis using CHIR-090 (LpxC) and fatty acid biosynthesis using cerulenin (FabB/F) and pyridopyrimidine (acetyl-CoA-carboxylase). Here, we expand on this by showing that inhibition of enoyl-acyl carrier protein reductase (FabI), responsible for converting trans-2-enoyl-ACP into acyl-ACP during the fatty acid elongation cycle also restored growth during LpxK depletion. Inhibition of fatty acid biosynthesis during LpxK depletion rescued growth at 37°C, but not at 30°C, whereas rescue by LpxC inhibition was temperature independent. We exploited these observations to demonstrate proof of concept for a targeted medium-throughput growth restoration screening assay to identify small molecule inhibitors of LOS and fatty acid biosynthesis. The differential temperature dependence of fatty acid and LpxC inhibition provides a simple means by which to separate growth stimulating compounds by pathway. Targeted cell-based screening platforms such as this are important for faster identification of compounds inhibiting pathways of interest in antibacterial discovery for clinically relevant Gram-negative pathogens.

Highlights

  • The relentless emergence of antibacterial resistance has led to a resurgence in public and private research to discover novel antibiotics, in particular for Gram-negative infections due to the paucity of compounds in clinical development [1]

  • We previously demonstrated that down-regulation of lpxK in A. baumannii American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) 19606 led to a toxic accumulation of LOS intermediates [79]

  • We previously demonstrated that LpxK depletion in A. baumannii ATCC 19606 led to toxic accumulation of lipid A pathway intermediates that prevented growth [79]

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Summary

Introduction

The relentless emergence of antibacterial resistance has led to a resurgence in public and private research to discover novel antibiotics, in particular for Gram-negative infections due to the paucity of compounds in clinical development [1]. The specific roles of these authors are articulated in the ‘author contributions’ section

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