4.8 Article

Mode of action of teixobactins in cellular membranes

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-16600-2

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Dutch Research Council (NWO) [723.014.003, 711.018.001, 700.26.121, 700.10.443, 718.015.00]
  2. Innovate UK [106368-623146, JS15/M783]
  3. Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), UK [106368-623146, JS15/M783]
  4. Rosetrees Trust [106368-623146, JS15/M783]
  5. uNMR-NL, an NWO [184.032.207]
  6. iNEXT, a Horizon 2020 programme of the European Union [653706]
  7. European Union Horizon 2020 BioExcel [675728, 823830]

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The natural antibiotic teixobactin kills pathogenic bacteria without detectable resistance. The difficult synthesis and unfavourable solubility of teixobactin require modifications, yet insufficient knowledge on its binding mode impedes the hunt for superior analogues. Thus far, teixobactins are assumed to kill bacteria by binding to cognate cell wall precursors (Lipid II and III). Here we present the binding mode of teixobactins in cellular membranes using solid-state NMR, microscopy, and affinity assays. We solve the structure of the complex formed by an improved teixobactin-analogue and Lipid II and reveal how teixobactins recognize a broad spectrum of targets. Unexpectedly, we find that teixobactins only weakly bind to Lipid II in cellular membranes, implying the direct interaction with cell wall precursors is not the sole killing mechanism. Our data suggest an additional mechanism affords the excellent activity of teixobactins, which can block the cell wall biosynthesis by capturing precursors in massive clusters on membranes. The natural antibiotic teixobactin kills bacteria by direct binding to their cognate cell wall precursors (Lipid II and III). Here authors use solid-state NMR to reveal the native binding mode of teixobactins and show that teixobactins only weakly bind to Lipid II in anionic cellular membranes.

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