Tackling Pseudomonas aeruginosa Virulence by a Hydroxamic Acid-Based LasB Inhibitor.
Kany. Andreas M AM; Sikandar. Asfandyar A; Yahiaoui. Samir S; Haupenthal. Jörg J; Walter. Isabell I; Empting. Martin M; Köhnke. Jesko J; Hartmann. Rolf W RW
Key Findings
- A hydroxamate‑based molecule selectively inhibits the LasB zinc protease without affecting human matrix metalloproteases.
- Inhibition of LasB restores and enhances the antibacterial activity of the peptide LL‑37 against P. aeruginosa.
- The inhibitor reduces biofilm formation and extracellular DNA release, two key mechanisms of bacterial resistance.
Practical Outcomes
- For now, the finding is mainly scientific: it shows that targeting LasB can boost LL‑37’s effect and weaken P. aeruginosa defenses. There is no ready‑to‑use supplement or protocol for biohackers, but the work suggests future combos of protease inhibitors with antimicrobial peptides could become a strategy for tackling resistant infections.
Summary
Scientists made a new compound that blocks a bacterial enzyme (LasB) used by Pseudomonas aeruginosa to protect itself. By blocking this enzyme, the natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 works better, the bacteria form less sticky biofilm, and they release less DNA that helps them resist treatment. The compound is still experimental and not something you can buy or use at home.
Abstract
In search of novel antibiotics to combat the challenging spread of resistant pathogens, bacterial proteases represent promising targets for pathoblocker development. A common motif for protease inhibitors is the hydroxamic acid function, yet this group has often been related to unspecific inhibition of various metalloproteases. In this work, the inhibition of LasB, a harmful zinc metalloprotease secreted by Pseudomonas aeruginosa, through a hydroxamate derivative is described. The present inhibitor was developed based on a recently reported, highly selective thiol scaffold. Using X-ray crystallography, the lack of inhibition of a range of human matrix metalloproteases could be attributed to a distinct binding mode sparing the S1' pocket. The inhibitor was shown to restore the effect of the antimicrobial peptide LL-37, decrease the formation of P. aeruginosa biofilm and, for the first time for a LasB inhibitor, reduce the release of extracellular DNA. Hence, it is capable of disrupting several important bacterial resistance mechanisms. These results highlight the potential of protease inhibitors to fight bacterial infections and point out the possibility to achieve selective inhibition even with a strong zinc anchor.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
2018-08-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.1021/acschembio.8b00257
31
71