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Hijacking the Heme Acquisition System of Pseudomonas aeruginosa for the Delivery of Phthalocyanine as an Antimicrobial.

Yuma ShisakaYusuke IwaiShiho YamadaHiromu UeharaTakehiko ToshaHiroshi SugimotoYoshitsugu ShiroJoshua K StanfieldKazuya OgawaYoshihito WatanabeOsami Shoji
Published in: ACS chemical biology (2019)
To survive in the iron-devoid environment of their host, pathogenic bacteria have devised multifarious cunning tactics such as evolving intricate heme transport systems to pirate extracellular heme. Yet, the potential of heme transport systems as antimicrobial targets has not been explored. Herein we developed a strategy to deliver antimicrobials by exploiting the extracellular heme acquisition system protein A (HasA) of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. We demonstrated that, analogous to heme uptake, HasA can specifically traffic an antimicrobial, gallium phthalocyanine (GaPc), into the intracellular space of P. aeruginosa via the interaction of HasA with its outer membrane receptor HasR. HasA enables water-insoluble GaPc to be mistakenly acquired by P. aeruginosa, permitting its sterilization (>99.99%) by irradiation with near-infrared (NIR) light, irrespective of antibiotic resistance. Our findings substantiate that bacterial heme uptake via protein-protein recognition is an attractive target for antimicrobials, enabling specific and effective sterilization.
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