Abstract

The spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria represents a substantial health threat. Current antibiotics act on a few metabolic pathways, facilitating resistance. Consequently, novel regulatory inhibition mechanisms are necessary. Riboswitches represent promising targets for antibacterial drugs. Purine riboswitches are interesting, since they play essential roles in the genetic regulation of bacterial metabolism. Among these, class I (2′-dG-I) and class II (2′-dG-II) are two different 2′-deoxyguanosine (2′-dG) riboswitches involved in the control of deoxyguanosine metabolism. However, high affinity for nucleosides involves local or distal modifications around the ligand-binding pocket, depending on the class. Therefore, it is crucial to understand these riboswitches’ recognition mechanisms as antibiotic targets. In this work, we used a combination of computational biophysics approaches to investigate the structure, dynamics, and energy landscape of both 2′-dG classes bound to the nucleoside ligands, 2′-deoxyguanosine, and riboguanosine. Our results suggest that the stability and increased interactions in the three-way junction of 2′-dG riboswitches were associated with a higher nucleoside ligand affinity. Also, structural changes in the 2′-dG-II aptamers enable enhanced intramolecular communication. Overall, the 2′-dG-II riboswitch might be a promising drug design target due to its ability to recognize both cognate and noncognate ligands.

Highlights

  • The spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria represents a substantial health threat contributing to morbidity and mortality worldwide [1]

  • Current antibiotics act on a few metabolic pathways, facilitating the emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria

  • Our results suggest that the stability and increased interactions in the three-way junction of 20 -dG riboswitches are related to a higher affinity for nucleoside ligands

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Summary

Introduction

The spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria represents a substantial health threat contributing to morbidity and mortality worldwide [1]. Developing new regulatory inhibition mechanisms that act differently from the current ones becomes an immediate necessity In this scenario, riboswitches represent novel and promising targets for developing useful antibacterial drugs. These features show that two different evolutionary events might have happened when the classes evolved from guanine riboswitches [14] In this context, understanding the mechanism of ligand recognition is crucial for proposing a riboswitch as an antibiotic target. We highlighted that critical structural differences in the 20 -dG-II aptamers enable enhanced intramolecular communication This riboswitch class appeared to be a promising target for drug design since it presents high affinity and specificity for both cognate and noncognate ligands

RNA Content Analysis
Influence of Ligands on Dynamics of 20 dG Riboswitches
Analysis
Cognate and Noncognate Ligands Alter the Dynamical Secondary Structure
Anticorrelated Motions Are Changed by Cognate and Noncognate Ligands
Communication
Normalized
Discussion
Construction and Analysis of Molecular Systems
Molecular Dynamics Simulations
Trajectory Analysis
Full Text
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