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Establishing the Structure-Activity Relationship between Phosphatidylglycerol and Daptomycin.

Ryan MoreiraScott D Taylor
Published in: ACS infectious diseases (2022)
Daptomycin is a clinical antibiotic used to treat serious infections caused by Gram-positive bacteria. Although there is debate about the action mechanism of daptomycin, it is known that daptomycin requires both calcium and phosphatidylglycerol (PG) to exert its antibacterial effect. Despite the importance and uniqueness of the interaction of daptomycin with PG, very little is known about this interaction or the nascent daptomycin-PG complex. In this work, we establish a structure-activity relationship between daptomycin and PG through the synthesis of PG analogues. In total, nine PGs were synthesized using a divergent approach employing phosphoramidite chemistry. The interaction between daptomycin and these PGs was studied using fluorescence, circular dichroism, and isothermal titration calorimetry. It was determined that daptomycin is highly sensitive to the modification of the headgroup of PG and both hydroxyl groups influence membrane binding, oligomerization, and backbone structure. Methylation of each hydroxyl in the headgroup suggests that the binding pocket envelops both hydroxyl groups. A PG acyl tail chain length of at least 7-8 carbons is required for stoichiometric binding at micromolar peptide concentrations. Daptomycin binds to PG having 8-carbon, linear, unsaturated acyl groups (C8PGs) at the micromolar concentration and interacts with C8PG in essentially the same manner as when the PG is incorporated into a liposome, and thus, preassembly of individual PG moieties is not a prerequisite for binding, structural transition, and oligomerization.
Keyphrases
  • methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • binding protein
  • dna binding
  • transcription factor
  • genome wide
  • quantum dots
  • simultaneous determination
  • nucleic acid
  • molecularly imprinted