Dysregulation of bacterial proteolytic machinery by a new class of antibiotics

H Brötz-Oesterhelt, D Beyer, HP Kroll, R Endermann… - Nature medicine, 2005 - nature.com
H Brötz-Oesterhelt, D Beyer, HP Kroll, R Endermann, C Ladel, W Schroeder, B Hinzen…
Nature medicine, 2005nature.com
Here we show that a new class of antibiotics—acyldepsipeptides—has antibacterial activity
against Gram-positive bacteria in vitro and in several rodent models of bacterial infection.
The acyldepsipeptides are active against isolates that are resistant to antibiotics in clinical
application, implying a new target, which we identify as ClpP, the core unit of a major
bacterial protease complex. ClpP is usually tightly regulated and strictly requires a member
of the family of Clp-ATPases and often further accessory proteins for proteolytic activation …
Abstract
Here we show that a new class of antibiotics—acyldepsipeptides—has antibacterial activity against Gram-positive bacteria in vitro and in several rodent models of bacterial infection. The acyldepsipeptides are active against isolates that are resistant to antibiotics in clinical application, implying a new target, which we identify as ClpP, the core unit of a major bacterial protease complex. ClpP is usually tightly regulated and strictly requires a member of the family of Clp-ATPases and often further accessory proteins for proteolytic activation. Binding of acyldepsipeptides to ClpP eliminates these safeguards. The acyldepsipeptide-activated ClpP core is capable of proteolytic degradation in the absence of the regulatory Clp-ATPases. Such uncontrolled proteolysis leads to inhibition of bacterial cell division and eventually cell death.
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