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The mechanism of ceftazidime and cefiderocol hydrolysis by D179Y variants of KPC carbapenemases is similar and involves the formation of a long-lived covalent intermediate.

Andre BirgyChristina NnabuifeTimothy G Palzkill
Published in: Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy (2024)
Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase (KPC) variants have been described that confer resistance to both ceftazidime-avibactam and cefiderocol. Of these, KPC-33 and KPC-31 are D179Y-containing variants derived from KPC-2 and KPC-3, respectively. To better understand this atypical phenotype, the catalytic mechanism of ceftazidime and cefiderocol hydrolysis by KPC-33 and KPC-31 as well as the ancestral KPC-2 and KPC-3 enzymes was studied. Steady-state kinetics showed that the D179Y substitution in either KPC-2 or KPC-3 is associated with a large decrease in both k cat and K M such that k cat / K M values were largely unchanged for both ceftazidime and cefiderocol substrates. A decrease in both k cat and K M is consistent with a decreased and rate-limiting deacylation step. We explored this hypothesis by performing pre-steady-state kinetics and showed that the acylation step is rate-limiting for KPC-2 and KPC-3 for both ceftazidime and cefiderocol hydrolysis. In contrast, we observed a burst of acyl-enzyme formation followed by a slow steady-state rate for the D179Y variants of KPC-2 and KPC-3 with either ceftazidime or cefiderocol, indicating that deacylation of the covalent intermediate is the rate-limiting step for catalysis. Finally, we show that the low K M value for ceftazidime or cefiderocol hydrolysis of the D179Y variants is not an indication of tight binding affinity for the substrates but rather is a reflection of the deacylation reaction becoming rate-limiting. Thus, the hydrolysis mechanism of ceftazidime and cefiderocol by the D179Y variants is very similar and involves the formation of a long-lived covalent intermediate that is associated with resistance to the drugs.
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