Abstract

The emergence and spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria is pushing the need of alternative treatments. In this context, phage therapy is already a reality to successfully fight certain multiresistant bacteria. Among different phage gene products, murein hydrolases responsible of phage progeny liberation (also called lysins or endolysins) are weapons that target specific peptidoglycan bonds, leading to lysis and death of susceptible bacteria when added from the outside. In the pneumococcal system, all but one phage murein hydrolases reported to date share a choline-binding domain that recognizes cell walls containing choline residues in the (lipo)teichoic acids. Some purified pneumococcal or phage murein hydrolases, as well as several chimeric proteins combining natural catalytic and cell wall-binding domains (CBDs) have been used as effective antimicrobials. In this work we have constructed a novel chimeric N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase (PL3) by fusing the catalytic domain of the Pal amidase (a phage-coded endolysin) to the CBD of the LytA amidase, the major pneumococcal autolysin. The physicochemical properties of PL3 and the bacteriolytic effect against several pneumococci (including 48 multiresistant representative strain) and related species, like Streptococcus pseudopneumoniae, Streptococcus mitis, and Streptococcus oralis, have been studied. Results have shown that low doses of PL3, in the range of 0.5–5 μg/ml, are enough to practically sterilize all choline-containing strains tested. Moreover, a single 20-μg dose of PL3 fully protected zebrafish embryos from infection by S. pneumoniae D39 strain. Importantly, PL3 keeps 95% enzymatic activity after 4 weeks at 37°C and can be lyophilized without losing activity, demonstrating a remarkable robustness. Such stability, together with a prominent efficacy against a narrow spectrum of human pathogens, confers to PL3 the characteristic to be an effective therapeutic. In addition, our results demonstrate that the structure/function-based domain shuffling approach is a successful method to construct tailor-made endolysins with higher bactericidal activities than their parental enzymes.

Highlights

  • Discovery of penicillin and other antibiotics allowed effective treatment of infectious diseases, which provoked a tremendous impact on public health

  • The use and abuse of antibiotics in the last years have led to a substantial rise of bacterial multiresistance and this worrying situation runs parallel with the scarcity of new antimicrobials in the pharmaceutical pipeline (Spellberg et al, 2015)

  • The goal of this work was to construct a new chimeric lysin directed against S. pneumoniae and other choline-containing Gram-positive bacteria, with higher activity and stability than the parental enzymes

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Summary

Introduction

Discovery of penicillin and other antibiotics allowed effective treatment of infectious diseases, which provoked a tremendous impact on public health. It has been learned that sooner or later bacteria are capable of acquiring resistance to practically every known antibiotic This resistance is readily transferred to other bacteria and, at the end, there is a continuous warfare between the ability of bacteria to resist any new antimicrobial and the armamentarium of new weapons to overcome treatment failures and kill the targeted bacteria. In this context, the use and abuse of antibiotics in the last years have led to a substantial rise of bacterial multiresistance and this worrying situation runs parallel with the scarcity of new antimicrobials in the pharmaceutical pipeline (Spellberg et al, 2015). The tendency on the emergence of multidrug resistance pathogens is an increasingly global economic and healthcare crisis, and this situation is pushing to find alternative approaches for combating such pathogens, S. pneumoniae being one of the more clear examples (Huttner et al, 2013)

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