Abstract

ABSTRACTNew approaches to antimicrobial drug discovery are urgently needed to combat intractable infections caused by multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria. Multiple virulence factor regulator (MvfR or PqsR), a Pseudomonas aeruginosa quorum sensing transcription factor, regulates functions important in both acute and persistent infections. Recently identified non-ligand-based benzamine-benzimidazole (BB) inhibitors of MvfR suppress both acute and persistent P. aeruginosa infections in mice without perturbing bacterial growth. Here, we elucidate the crystal structure of the MvfR ligand binding domain (LBD) in complex with one potent BB inhibitor, M64. Structural analysis indicated that M64 binds, like native ligands, to the MvfR hydrophobic cavity. A hydrogen bond and pi interaction were found to be important for MvfR-M64 affinity. Surface plasmon resonance analysis demonstrated that M64 is a competitive inhibitor of MvfR. Moreover, a protein engineering approach revealed that Gln194 and Tyr258 are critical for the interaction between MvfR and M64. Random mutagenesis of the full-length MvfR protein identified a single-amino-acid substitution, I68F, at a DNA binding linker domain that confers M64 insensitivity. In the presence of M64, I68F but not the wild-type (WT) MvfR protein retained DNA binding ability. Our findings strongly suggest that M64 promotes conformational change at the DNA binding domain of MvfR and that the I68F mutation may compensate for this change, indicating allosteric inhibition. This work provides critical new insights into the molecular mechanism of MvfR function and inhibition that could aid in the optimization of anti-MvfR compounds and improve our understanding of MvfR regulation.

Highlights

  • New approaches to antimicrobial drug discovery are urgently needed to combat intractable infections caused by multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria

  • Interacts with multiple virulence factor regulator (MvfR), we solved the crystal structure of the MvfR ligand binding domain (LBD) complexed with M64 (MvfRM64) using the crystal soaking methodology under the conditions reported by Ilangovan et al [31]

  • The structure of MvfRM64 was determined in the orthorhombic space group C 2 2 21 at 2.65-Å resolution, with two protein monomers in the asymmetric unit

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Summary

Introduction

New approaches to antimicrobial drug discovery are urgently needed to combat intractable infections caused by multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria. IMPORTANCE Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an opportunistic Gram-negative pathogen that causes serious acute, persistent, and relapsing infections. AT/P cells are characterized by a suppressed metabolic state that permits them to tolerate exposure to normally lethal concentrations of antibiotics [11,12,13] This ability, which is not consequent to antibiotic resistance mutation, has been implicated in antibiotic treatment failures and the occurrence of latent, chronic, and relapsing infections [11,12,13]. MvfR is a quorum sensing transcriptional regulator that regulates virulence functions critical for acute, persistent, and relapsing infections, making it a high-interest novel drug target for treatment of P. aeruginosa infections [20, 21]. MvfR controls its own activity by upregulating the expression of genes in the pqsABCDE and phnAB operons, which encode enzymes that catalyze the biosynthesis of at least 57 distinct low-molecular-weight compounds [18, 20, 21, 24, 25], including hydroxyquinolones (HAQs) [26] and the non-HAQ molecule 2-aminoacetophenone (2-AA) [15, 22, 27, 28]

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