Login / Signup

Synthetic biohybrid peptidoglycan oligomers enable pan-bacteria-specific labeling and imaging: in vitro and in vivo.

Jing-Xi HeKim Le Mai HoangShu Hui KhoZhong GuoWenbin ZhongKishore Reddy Venkata ThappetaRubí Zamudio-VázquezSin Ni HooQirong XiongHongwei DuanLiang YangMary B Chan-ParkXue-Wei Liu
Published in: Chemical science (2020)
Peptidoglycan is the core component of the bacterial cell wall, which makes it an attractive target for the development of bacterial targeting agents. Intercepting its enzymatic assembly with synthetic substrates allows for labeling and engineering of live bacterial cells. Over the past two decades, small-molecule-based labeling agents, such as antibiotics, d-amino acids or monosaccharides have been developed for probing biological processes in bacteria. Herein, peptidoglycan oligomers, substrates for transglycosylation, are prepared for the first time using a top-down approach, which starts from chitosan as a cheap feedstock. A high efficiency of labeling has been observed in all bacterial strains tested using micromolar substrates. In contrast, uptake into mammalian cells was barely observable. Additional mechanistic studies support a hypothesis of bacteria-specific metabolic labeling rather than non-specific binding to the bacterial surface. Eventually, its practicality in bacterial targeting capability is demonstrated in resistant strain detection and in vivo infection models.
Keyphrases
  • cell wall
  • small molecule
  • high efficiency
  • magnetic resonance
  • cancer therapy
  • induced apoptosis
  • high resolution
  • drug delivery
  • amino acid
  • oxidative stress
  • nitric oxide
  • mass spectrometry
  • quantum dots