RESUMO
The wide spread of metallo-ß-lactamase (MBL)-expressing bacteria has greatly threatened human health, and there is an urgent need for inhibitors against MBLs. Herein, we present a cephalosporin-tripodalamine conjugate (DPASC) as a potent MBL inhibitor with a block-release design. The cephalosporin tag blocks the ligand binding site to reduce toxicity and is cleaved by MBLs to release active ligands to inhibit MBLs in situ. The screening of MBL-expressing pathogenic strains with 16 µg/mL DPASC showed a decrease of the minimum inhibitory concentration of meropenem (MEM) by 16 to 512-fold, and its toxicity was minimal to human HepG2 cells, with an IC50 exceeding 512 µg/mL. An in vivo infection model with Galleria mellonella larvae showed an increased 3-day survival rate of 87% with the coadministration of DPASC and MEM, compared to 50% with MEM alone and no toxicity at a dose of 256 mg/kg of DPASC. Our findings with DPASC demonstrate that it is an effective MBL inhibitor and that the block-release strategy could be useful for the development of new MBL inhibitors.
Assuntos
Cefalosporinas , beta-Lactamases , Humanos , beta-Lactamases/metabolismo , Meropeném/farmacologia , Cefalosporinas/farmacologia , Ligantes , Antibacterianos/farmacologia , Antibacterianos/química , Inibidores de beta-Lactamases/farmacologia , Inibidores de beta-Lactamases/química , Testes de Sensibilidade Microbiana , MonobactamasRESUMO
Precision remodeling of glycans in their native environments is pivotal for understanding glycan-mediated biological events and has important biotechnological implications in fields of clinical diagnosis, glyco-immune checkpoint therapy, and so forth. However, the influence of aglycone-steric diversity on the selectivity of glycan remodeling has been largely overlooked, limiting the application in complex biological scenarios. Here, we report the achievement of aglycone sterics-selective enzymatic glycan remodeling by controlled grafting of functional polymers from glycoenzyme. Through tuning polymer length, a series of enzyme-polymer composites with varying substrate permeability are prepared, which afford an activity pattern-based differentiation strategy for aglycone sterics. This leads to the implementation of glycolipid's partner screening, and aglycone sterics-selective glycan remodeling in a complex biological environment. We further orchestrate the polymer length adjustment with external cues to regulate aglycone-steric selectivity in a multi-faceted fashion, resulting in an unexpected enhancement of glycolipid remodeling, and temporal control of glycan remodeling on live cells.
RESUMO
Given the powerful regulation roles of chemical modification networks in protein structures and functions, it is of vital importance to acquire the spatiotemporal chemical modification pattern information in a protein-specific fashion, which is by far a highly challenging task. Herein, we design a localized DNA automaton, equipped with an anticoding-coding sequential propagation algorithm, for in situ visualization of a given protein subtype with two chemical modifications of interest on the cell surface. The automaton is composed of three probes respectively for the protein and two types of modifications. Once anchored on the cell surface and triggered, the automaton performs sequential protein-localized, DNA hybridization-based computations on the proximity status of each modification type with the protein and contracts the set of close proximity information into a single fluorescence signal turn-on using the designed algorithm. The modular and scalable features of the automaton enable its operation in scaled-down versions for protein-specific identification of one given modification. Thus, this work opens up the possibility of using automata for revealing complex regulation mechanisms of protein posttranslational modifications.
RESUMO
In mammalian cells, autophagy plays crucial roles in restricting further spread of invading bacterial pathogens. Previous studies have established that the Salmonella virulence factors SseF and SseG are required for intracellular bacterial survival and replication. However, the underlying mechanism by which these two effectors facilitate bacterial infection remains elusive. Here, we report that SseF and SseG secreted by Salmonella Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) inhibit autophagy in host cells and thereby establish a replicative niche for the bacteria in the cytosol. Mechanistically, SseF and SseG impaired autophagy initiation by directly interacting with the small GTPase Rab1A in the host cell. This interaction abolished Rab1A activation by disrupting the interaction with its guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF), the TRAPPIII (transport protein particle III) complex. This disruption of Rab1A signaling blocked the recruitment and activation of Unc-51-like autophagy-activating kinase 1 (ULK1) and decreased phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate biogenesis, which ultimately impeded autophagosome formation. Furthermore, SseF- or SseG-deficient bacterial strains exhibited reduced survival and growth in both mammalian cell lines and mouse infection models, and Rab1A depletion could rescue these defects. These results reveal that virulence factor-dependent inactivation of the small GTPase Rab1A represents a previously unrecognized strategy of S Typhimurium to evade autophagy and the host defense system.