Unraveling topoisomerase IA gate dynamics in presence of PPEF and its preclinical evaluation against multidrug-resistant pathogens.
Vikas MauryaRaja SinghReman Kumar SinghStuti PandeyPooja YadavPalak ParasharRajni GaindKshatresh Dutta DubeyG Naresh PatwariVibha TandonPublished in: Communications biology (2023)
Type IA topoisomerases maintain DNA topology by cleaving ssDNA and relaxing negative supercoils. The inhibition of its activity in bacteria prevents the relaxation of negative supercoils, which in turn impedes DNA metabolic processes leading to cell death. Using this hypothesis, two bisbenzimidazoles, PPEF and BPVF are synthesized, selectively inhibiting bacterial TopoIA and TopoIII. PPEF stabilizes the topoisomerase and topoisomerase-ssDNA complex, acts as an interfacial inhibitor. PPEF display high efficacy against ~455 multi-drug resistant gram positive and negative bacteria. To understand molecular mechanism of inhibition of TopoIA and PPEF, accelerated MD simulation is carried out, and results suggested that PPEF binds, stabilizes the closed conformation of TopoIA with -6Kcal/mol binding energy and destabilizes the binding of ssDNA. The TopoIA gate dynamics model can be used as a tool to screen TopoIA inhibitors as therapeutic candidates. PPEF and BPVF cause cellular filamentation and DNA fragmentation leading to bacterial cell death. PPEF and BPVF show potent efficacy against systemic and neutropenic mouse models harboring E. coli, VRSA, and MRSA infection without cellular toxicity.
Keyphrases
- drug resistant
- multidrug resistant
- cell death
- gram negative
- circulating tumor
- single molecule
- acinetobacter baumannii
- cell free
- escherichia coli
- molecular dynamics simulations
- high throughput
- oxidative stress
- stem cells
- signaling pathway
- bone marrow
- methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus
- sensitive detection
- cell cycle arrest
- cell therapy
- antimicrobial resistance
- living cells
- virtual reality