Abstract
BackgroundThe first line of defense by bacteria against β-lactam antibiotics is the expression of β-lactamases, which cleave the amide bond of the β-lactam ring. In the reaction of biapenem inactivation by B2 metallo β-lactamases (MβLs), after the β-lactam ring is opened, the carboxyl group generated by the hydrolytic process and the hydroxyethyl group (common to all carbapenems) rotate around the C5–C6 bond, assuming a new position that allows a proton transfer from the hydroxyethyl group to C2, and a nucleophilic attack on C3 by the oxygen atom of the same side-chain. This process leads to the formation of a bicyclic compound, as originally observed in the X-ray structure of the metallo β-lactamase CphA in complex with product.Methodology/Principal FindingsQM/MM and metadynamics simulations of the post-hydrolysis steps in solution and in the enzyme reveal that while the rotation of the hydroxyethyl group can occur in solution or in the enzyme active site, formation of the bicyclic compound occurs primarily in solution, after which the final product binds back to the enzyme. The calculations also suggest that the rotation and cyclization steps can occur at a rate comparable to that observed experimentally for the enzymatic inactivation of biapenem only if the hydrolysis reaction leaves the N4 nitrogen of the β-lactam ring unprotonated.Conclusions/SignificanceThe calculations support the existence of a common mechanism (in which ionized N4 is the leaving group) for carbapenems hydrolysis in all MβLs, and suggest a possible revision of mechanisms for B2 MβLs in which the cleavage of the β-lactam ring is associated with or immediately followed by protonation of N4. The study also indicates that the bicyclic derivative of biapenem has significant affinity for B2 MβLs, and that it may be possible to obtain clinically effective inhibitors of these enzymes by modification of this lead compound.
Highlights
The first line of defense by bacteria against b-lactam antibiotics is the expression of b-lactamases, which cleave the amide bond of the b-lactam ring and inactivate the antibiotics [1]
Post-hydrolysis reactions in water The uncatalyzed formation of the bicyclic compound from hydrolyzed biapenem was simulated inside a sphere of water molecules of 26 Aradius reproducing the actual concentration of water at 1 atm and 298.15 K
Hydrolyzed biapenem was in the conformation that ensues upon rotation of the hydroxyethyl group around the C5–C6 bond, but two separate QM/ MM simulations were carried out with N4 protonated or deprotonated as these are the two possible chemical forms of the reactant state (RS) for the post-hydrolysis reaction
Summary
The first line of defense by bacteria against b-lactam antibiotics is the expression of b-lactamases, which cleave the amide bond of the b-lactam ring and inactivate the antibiotics [1]. In the reaction of biapenem inactivation by B2 metallo b-lactamases (MbLs), after the b-lactam ring is opened, the carboxyl group generated by the hydrolytic process and the hydroxyethyl group (common to all carbapenems) rotate around the C5–C6 bond, assuming a new position that allows a proton transfer from the hydroxyethyl group to C2, and a nucleophilic attack on C3 by the oxygen atom of the same side-chain. This process leads to the formation of a bicyclic compound, as originally observed in the X-ray structure of the metallo b-lactamase CphA in complex with product
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