Abstract

Active efflux due to tripartite RND efflux pumps is an important mechanism of clinically relevant antibiotic resistance in Gram-negative bacteria. These pumps are also essential for Gram-negative pathogens to cause infection and form biofilms. They consist of an inner membrane RND transporter; a periplasmic adaptor protein (PAP), and an outer membrane channel. The role of PAPs in assembly, and the identities of specific residues involved in PAP-RND binding, remain poorly understood. Using recent high-resolution structures, four 3D sites involved in PAP-RND binding within each PAP protomer were defined that correspond to nine discrete linear binding sequences or “binding boxes” within the PAP sequence. In the important human pathogen Salmonella enterica, these binding boxes are conserved within phylogenetically-related PAPs, such as AcrA and AcrE, while differing considerably between divergent PAPs such as MdsA and MdtA, despite overall conservation of the PAP structure. By analysing these binding sequences we created a predictive model of PAP-RND interaction, which suggested the determinants that may allow promiscuity between certain PAPs, but discrimination of others. We corroborated these predictions using direct phenotypic data, confirming that only AcrA and AcrE, but not MdtA or MsdA, can function with the major RND pump AcrB. Furthermore, we provide functional validation of the involvement of the binding boxes by disruptive site-directed mutagenesis. These results directly link sequence conservation within identified PAP binding sites with functional data providing mechanistic explanation for assembly of clinically relevant RND-pumps and explain how Salmonella and other pathogens maintain a degree of redundancy in efflux mediated resistance. Overall, our study provides a novel understanding of the molecular determinants driving the RND-PAP recognition by bridging the available structural information with experimental functional validation thus providing the scientific community with a predictive model of pump-contacts that could be exploited in the future for the development of targeted therapeutics and efflux pump inhibitors.

Highlights

  • The incidence of multidrug resistant (MDR) infections is increasing globally and the need to understand the mechanisms of this resistance is paramount in order to develop novel therapeutics

  • Active efflux due to tripartite efflux pumps is an important mechanism of clinically relevant antibiotic resistance in Gram-negative bacteria

  • We have defined for the first time the residue ranges of the periplasmic adaptor protein (PAP) that are involved in the assembly of the major tripartite efflux systems in Salmonella and E. coli based on structural analysis and functional data

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The incidence of multidrug resistant (MDR) infections is increasing globally and the need to understand the mechanisms of this resistance is paramount in order to develop novel therapeutics. The tripartite pumps built around the RND family of transporters are the most clinically relevant class and are found in all Gram-negative bacteria with AcrAB-TolC being the principal RND efflux system in Salmonella, Escherichia coli and other Enterobacteriaceae [3]. RND efflux pumps are fundamental to the biology of Gram-negative bacteria; for example AcrB and TolC mutants had impaired biofilm formation [6, 7] and attenuated virulence including reduced colonisation of chickens [8, 9]. This multi-faceted role in the biology of Gram-negative bacteria makes these pumps attractive targets for the development of inhibitors

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call