Inhibition of Streptococcus pneumoniae growth by masarimycin

Author:

Haubrich Brad A.12ORCID,Nayyab Saman32ORCID,Gallati Mika2ORCID,Hernandez Jazmeen2,Williams Caroline2ORCID,Whitman Andrew2ORCID,Zimmerman Tahl4,Li Qiong5,Chen Yuxing5ORCID,Zhou Cong-Zhao5,Basu Amit6ORCID,Reid Christopher W.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Basic Sciences, Touro University Nevada, College of Osteopathic Medicine, Henderson, NV 89014, USA

2. Center for Health and Behavioral Sciences, Department of Science and Technology, Bryant University, 1150 Douglas Pike, Smithfield, RI 02917, USA

3. Amherst Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Massachusetts, 230 Stockbridge Rd Amherst, MA, USA

4. Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, North Carolina A&T State University, Greensboro, NC, USA

5. School of Life Sciences, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, Anhui, 230027, PR China

6. Department of Chemistry, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA

Abstract

Despite renewed interest, development of chemical biology methods to study peptidoglycan metabolism has lagged in comparison to the glycobiology field in general. To address this, a panel of diamides were screened against the Gram-positive bacterium Streptococcus pneumoniae to identify inhibitors of bacterial growth. The screen identified the diamide masarimycin as a bacteriostatic inhibitor of S. pneumoniae growth with an MIC of 8 µM. The diamide inhibited detergent-induced autolysis in a concentration-dependent manner, indicating perturbation of peptidoglycan degradation as the mode-of-action. Cell based screening of masarimycin against a panel of autolysin mutants, identified a higher MIC against a ΔlytB strain lacking an endo-N-acetylglucosaminidase involved in cell division. Subsequent biochemical and phenotypic analyses suggested that the higher MIC was due to an indirect interaction with LytB. Further analysis of changes to the cell surface in masarimycin treated cells identified the overexpression of several moonlighting proteins, including elongation factor Tu which is implicated in regulating cell shape. Checkerboard assays using masarimycin in concert with additional antibiotics identified an antagonistic relationship with the cell wall targeting antibiotic fosfomycin, which further supports a cell wall mode-of-action.

Funder

Division of Chemistry

National Science Foundation

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

Microbiology

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