Abstract

The development of new antibacterial agents and therapeutic approaches is of high importance to address the global problem of antibiotic resistance. Although antimicrobial peptides are known to synergize with certain antibiotics, their clinical application is limited by their systemic toxicity, protease instability, and high production cost. To overcome these problems, nine dilipid ultrashort tetrabasic peptidomimetics (dUSTBPs) were prepared consisting of three basic amino acids separated by a molecular scaffold, bis(3-aminopropyl)glycine, and were ligated to two fatty acids. Several nonhemolytic dUSTBPs were shown to enhance the activity of several antibiotics against pathogenic Gram-negative bacteria. More importantly, dUSTBP 8, consisting of three l-arginine units and a dilipid of 8 carbons long, potentiated novobiocin and rifampicin consistently against multidrug-resistant (MDR) clinical isolates of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Acinetobacter baumannii, and Enterobacteriaceae. Preliminary studies suggested that dUSTBPs were likely to potentiate antibiotics through outer membrane permeabilization and/or disruption of active efflux and that dUSTBP 8 exhibited enhanced resistance to trypsin in comparison to the previously described di-C9-KKKK-NH2 antibiotic potentiator. The antibacterial activity of rifampicin and novobiocin was enhanced by dUSTBP 8 comparable to other known outer membrane permeabilizing potentiators including the gold standard polymyxin B nonapeptide. Our results indicate that ultrashort tetrabasic peptidomimetics are potent adjuvants that repurpose novobiocin and rifampicin as potent agents against priority MDR Gram-negative pathogens.

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