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Is Simultaneous Binding to DNA and Gyrase Important for the Antibacterial Activity of Cystobactamids?

Danny SolgaLianne H E WieskeScott WilcoxCarsten ZeilingerLinda Jansen-OlligesKatarina CirnskiJennifer HerrmannDaniel KrugMáté ErdélyiAndreas Kirschning
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2024)
Cystobactamids are aromatic oligoamides that exert their natural antibacterial properties by inhibition of bacterial gyrases. Such aromatic oligoamides were proposed to inhibit α-helix-mediated protein-protein interactions and may serve for specific recognition of DNA. Based on this suggestion, we designed new derivatives that have duplicated cystobactamid triarene units as model systems to decipher the specific binding mode of cystobactamids to double stranded DNA. Solution NMR analyses revealed that natural cystobactamids as well as their elongated analogues show an overall bent shape at their central aliphatic unit, with an average CX-CY-CZ angle of ~110 degrees. Our finding is corroborated by the target-bound structure of close analogues, as established by cryo-EM very recently. Cystobactamid CN-861-2 binds directly to the bacterial gyrase with an affinity of 9 μM, and also exhibits DNA-binding properties with specificity for AT-rich DNA. Elongation/dimerization of the triarene subunit of native cystobactamids is demonstrated to lead to an increase in DNA binding affinity. This implies that cystobactamids' gyrase inhibitory activity necessitates not just interaction with the gyrase itself, but also with DNA via their triarene unit.
Keyphrases
  • dna binding
  • circulating tumor
  • cell free
  • single molecule
  • transcription factor
  • nucleic acid
  • high resolution
  • magnetic resonance
  • circulating tumor cells
  • amino acid
  • binding protein