A classic antibiotic reimagined: Rationally designed bacitracin variants exhibit potent activity against vancomycin-resistant pathogens.
Ned P BuijsHalana C VlamingIoli KotsogianniMelina ArtsJoost J WillemseYunhao DuanFrancesca M AlexanderStephen A CochraneTanja SchneiderNathaniel I MartinPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2024)
Bacitracin is a macrocyclic peptide antibiotic that is widely used as a topical treatment for infections caused by gram-positive bacteria. Mechanistically, bacitracin targets bacteria by specifically binding to the phospholipid undecaprenyl pyrophosphate (C 55 PP), which plays a key role in the bacterial lipid II cycle. Recent crystallographic studies have shown that when bound to C 55 PP, bacitracin adopts a highly ordered amphipathic conformation. In doing so, all hydrophobic side chains align on one face of the bacitracin-C 55 PP complex, presumably interacting with the bacterial cell membrane. These insights led us to undertake structure-activity investigations into the individual contribution of the nonpolar amino acids found in bacitracin. To achieve this we designed, synthesized, and evaluated a series of bacitracin analogues, a number of which were found to exhibit significantly enhanced antibacterial activity against clinically relevant, drug-resistant pathogens. As for the natural product, these next-generation bacitracins were found to form stable complexes with C 55 PP. The structure-activity insights thus obtained serve to inform the design of C 55 PP-targeting antibiotics, a key and underexploited antibacterial strategy.