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Impact of PmrB mutations on clinical Klebsiella pneumoniae with variable colistin-susceptibilities: Structural insights and potent therapeutic solutions.

Soumya BasuBalaji VeeraraghavanAnand Anbarasu
Published in: Chemical biology & drug design (2023)
Carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CRKP) infections continue to impose high morbidity threats to hospitalized patients worldwide, limiting therapeutic options to last-resort antibiotics like colistin. However, the dynamic genomic landscape of colistin-resistant K. pneumoniae (COLR-Kp) invoked ardent exploration of underlying molecular signatures for therapeutic propositions/designs. We unveiled the structural impact of the widespread and emerging PmrB mutations involved in colistin resistance (COLR) in K. pneumoniae. In the present study, clinical isolates of K. pneumoniae expressed variable susceptibilities to colistin (>0.5 μg/mL for resistant and ≤0.25 μg/mL for susceptible) despite mutations such as T157P, G207D and T246A. The protein sequences extracted from in-house sequenced genomes were used to model mutant PmrB proteins and analyze the underlying structural alterations. The mutations were contrasted based on molecular dynamics simulation trajectories, free-energy landscapes and structural flexibility profiles. The altered backbone flexibilities can be an essential factor for mutant selection by COLR K. pneumoniae and can provide clues to deal with emerging mutants. Furthermore, PmrB having high druggability confidence (>0.99), was explored as a potential target for 1396 virtually screened FDA-approved drug candidates. Among the top-10 compounds (scores >70), amphotericin B was found to be potential candidate with high affinity (Binding energy <-8 kcal/mol) and stable interactions (RMSF <0.7 Å) against PmrB druggable pockets, despite the mutations, which encourages future adjunct therapeutic research against COLR-Kp.
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