Campafungins: Inhibitors of Candida albicans and Cryptococcus neoformans Hyphal Growth.
Bruno PerlattiGuy HarrisConnie B NicholsDulamini I EkanayakeJ Andrew AlspaughJames B GloerGerald F BillsPublished in: Journal of natural products (2020)
Campafungin A is a polyketide that was recognized in the Candida albicans fitness test due to its antiproliferative and antihyphal activity. Its mode of action was hypothesized to involve inhibition of a cAMP-dependent PKA pathway. The originally proposed structure appeared to require a polyketide assembled in a somewhat unusual fashion. However, structural characterization data were never formally published. This background stimulated a reinvestigation in which campafungin A and three closely related minor constituents were purified from fermentations of a strain of the ascomycete fungus Plenodomus enteroleucus. Labeling studies, along with extensive NMR analysis, enabled assignment of a revised structure consistent with conventional polyketide synthetic machinery. The structure elucidation of campafungin A and new analogues encountered in this study, designated here as campafungins B, C, and D, is presented, along with a proposed biosynthetic route. The antimicrobial spectrum was expanded to methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Candida tropicalis, Candida glabrata, Cryptococcus neoformans, Aspergillus fumigatus, and Schizosaccharomyces pombe, with MICs ranging as low as 4-8 μg mL-1 in C. neoformans. Mode-of-action studies employing libraries of C. neoformans mutants indicated that multiple pathways were affected, but mutants in PKA/cAMP pathways were unaffected, indicating that the mode of action was distinct from that observed in C. albicans.
Keyphrases
- candida albicans
- methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus
- biofilm formation
- staphylococcus aureus
- case control
- binding protein
- magnetic resonance
- electronic health record
- molecular docking
- body composition
- high resolution
- big data
- escherichia coli
- randomized controlled trial
- machine learning
- mass spectrometry
- saccharomyces cerevisiae
- solid state
- drug induced
- cystic fibrosis