Abstract

Enzyme I (EI), which is the key enzyme to activate the bacterial phosphotransferase system, plays an important role in the regulation of several metabolic pathways and controls the biology of bacterial cells at multiple levels. The conservation and ubiquity of EI among different types of bacteria makes the enzyme a potential target for antimicrobial research. Here, we use NMR-based fragment screening to identify novel inhibitors of EI. We identify three molecular fragments that allosterically inhibit the phosphoryl transfer reaction catalyzed by EI by interacting with the enzyme at a surface pocket located more than 10 Å away from the substrate binding site. Interestingly, although the three molecules share the same binding pocket, we observe that two of the discovered EI ligands act as competitive inhibitors while the third ligand acts as a mixed inhibitor. Characterization of the EI-inhibitor complexes by NMR and Molecular Dynamics simulations reveals key interactions that perturb the fold of the active site and provides structural foundation for the different inhibitory activity of the identified molecular fragments. In particular, we show that contacts between the inhibitor and the side-chain of V292 are crucial to destabilize binding of the substrate to EI. In contrast, mixed inhibition is caused by additional contacts between the inhibitor and ⍺-helix 2 that perturb the active site structure and turnover in an allosteric manner. We expect our results to provide the basis for the development of second generation allosteric inhibitors of increased potency and to suggest novel molecular strategies to combat drug-resistant infections.

Highlights

  • The bacterial phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP):carbohydrate phosphotransferase system (PTS) is a signal transduction pathway that is involved in both transport and phosphorylation of a large number of carbohydrates (PTS carbohydrates), in the movement of cells toward these carbon sources, in biofilm formation, in the regulation of interactions between carbon and nitrogen metabolisms, and in the regulation of a number of other metabolic pathways, including catabolic gene expression, potassium transport, and inducer exclusion (Deutscher et al, 2014; Postma et al, 1996)

  • Novel small-molecule ligands of Enzyme I (EI) were identified by screening a rule-of-three-compliant library of 1000 molecular fragments against EI by Saturation Transfer Difference (STD) and Chemical Shift Perturbation (CSP) NMR experiments (Carr et al, 2005)

  • We have characterized a novel surface pocket localized on the EIC domain that is allosterically coupled to the enzyme active site

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Summary

Introduction

The bacterial phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP):carbohydrate phosphotransferase system (PTS) is a signal transduction pathway that is involved in both transport and phosphorylation of a large number of carbohydrates (PTS carbohydrates), in the movement of cells toward these carbon sources (chemotaxis), in biofilm formation, in the regulation of interactions between carbon and nitrogen metabolisms, and in the regulation of a number of other metabolic pathways, including catabolic gene expression, potassium transport, and inducer exclusion (Deutscher et al, 2014; Postma et al, 1996).

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