Abstract

Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections cause significant mortality and morbidity globally. MRSA resistance to β-lactam antibiotics is mediated by two divergons that control levels of a β-lactamase, PC1, and a penicillin-binding protein poorly acylated by β-lactam antibiotics, PBP2a. Expression of genes encoding these proteins is controlled by two integral membrane proteins, BlaR1 and MecR1, which both have an extracellular β-lactam-binding sensor domain. Here, we solved the X-ray crystallographic structures of the BlaR1 and MecR1 sensor domains in complex with avibactam, a diazabicyclooctane β-lactamase inhibitor at 1.6-2.0 Å resolution. Additionally, we show that S. aureus SF8300, a clinically relevant strain from the USA300 clone of MRSA, responds to avibactam by up-regulating the expression of the blaZ and pbp2a antibiotic-resistance genes, encoding PC1 and PBP2a, respectively. The BlaR1-avibactam structure of the carbamoyl-enzyme intermediate revealed that avibactam is bound to the active-site serine in two orientations ∼180° to each other. Although a physiological role of the observed alternative pose remains to be validated, our structural results hint at the presence of a secondary sulfate-binding pocket that could be exploited in the design of future inhibitors of BlaR1/MecR1 sensor domains or the structurally similar class D β-lactamases. The MecR1-avibactam structure adopted a singular avibactam orientation similar to one of the two states observed in the BlaR1-avibactam structure. Given avibactam up-regulates expression of blaZ and pbp2a antibiotic resistance genes, we suggest further consideration and research is needed to explore what effects administering β-lactam-avibactam combinations have on treating MRSA infections.

Highlights

  • Staphylococcus aureus is an important Gram-positive pathogen infecting humans and livestock around the world [1]

  • S. aureus SF8300 lacks MecR1 from the mec divergon so pbp2a expression is under the control of BlaR1

  • We show avibactam induces up-regulation of antibiotic-resistance genes in a clinical strain of Methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA), and our X-ray crystallographic models provide a molecular basis for avibactam binding to the BlaR1 and MecR1 sensor domains

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Summary

Introduction

Staphylococcus aureus is an important Gram-positive pathogen infecting humans and livestock around the world [1]. Avibactam is bound to MecR1SD in a similar orientation as conformation A in the BlaR1SD structure with analogous conserved residues Ser-439, Thr-529, Thr-531, and Lys-528 forming hydrogen bonds with the sulfate moiety of avibactam, whereas the C2 carboxamide at the opposite termini hydrogen bonds with a water, Asn-441, Asn-478, and Thr-531 (Fig. 5D).

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