Computational analyses of drug resistance mutations in katG and emb complexes in Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
Aadam BasraiTom L BlundellArun Prasad PanduranganPublished in: Proteins (2024)
The number of antibiotic resistant pathogens is increasing rapidly, and with this comes a substantial socioeconomic cost that threatens much of the world. To alleviate this problem, we must use antibiotics in a more responsible and informed way, further our understanding of the molecular basis of drug resistance, and design new antibiotics. Here, we focus on a key drug-resistant pathogen, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and computationally analyze trends in drug-resistant mutations in genes of the proteins embA, embB, embC, and katG, which play essential roles in the action of the first-line drugs ethambutol and isoniazid. We use docking to predict binding modes of isoniazid to katG that agree with suggested binding sites found in our laboratory using cryo-EM. Using mutant stability predictions, we recapitulate the idea that resistance occurs when katG's heme cofactor is destabilized rather than due to a decrease in affinity to isoniazid. Conversely, we have identified resistance mutations that affect the affinity of ethambutol more drastically than the affinity of the natural substrate of embB. With this, we illustrate that we can distinguish between the two types of drug resistance-cofactor destabilization and drug affinity reduction-suggesting potential uses in the prediction of novel drug-resistant mutations.
Keyphrases
- drug resistant
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- multidrug resistant
- acinetobacter baumannii
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- gram negative
- capillary electrophoresis
- molecular dynamics
- emergency department
- mass spectrometry
- gene expression
- small molecule
- risk assessment
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- protein protein
- adverse drug
- dna binding