4.8 Review

How to Enter a Bacterium: Bacterial Porins and the Permeation of Antibiotics

Journal

CHEMICAL REVIEWS
Volume 121, Issue 9, Pages 5158-5192

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrev.0c01213

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking from the European Union's seventh framework program (FP7/2007-2013) [115525]
  2. JPIAMR network RESET-ME [BMBF-ERANET JPIAMR -01KI1827B]
  3. JPIAMR Virtual Institute Translocation-Transfer [01KI1828]
  4. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [KL1299/9-2]

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Traditional antibiotics are facing the challenge of Gram-negative bacteria developing resistance, prompting the urgent need for new antibacterial agents. Designing new antibiotic molecules that can rapidly penetrate Gram-negative bacteria and achieve lethal intracellular drug accumulation is a major challenge. The lack of simple experimental techniques to measure antibiotic uptake and local concentrations in subcellular compartments is a limiting factor.
Despite tremendous successes in the field of antibiotic discovery seen in the previous century, infectious diseases have remained a leading cause of death. More specifically, pathogenic Gram-negative bacteria have become a global threat due to their extraordinary ability to acquire resistance against any clinically available antibiotic, thus urging for the discovery of novel antibacterial agents. One major challenge is to design new antibiotics molecules able to rapidly penetrate Gram-negative bacteria in order to achieve a lethal intracellular drug accumulation. Protein channels in the outer membrane are known to form an entry route for many antibiotics into bacterial cells. Up until today, there has been a lack of simple experimental techniques to measure the antibiotic uptake and the local concentration in subcellular compartments. Hence, rules for translocation directly into the various Gram-negative bacteria via the outer membrane or via channels have remained elusive, hindering the design of new or the improvement of existing antibiotics. In this review, we will discuss the recent progress, both experimentally as well as computationally, in understanding the structure-function relationship of outer-membrane channels of Gram-negative pathogens, mainly focusing on the transport of antibiotics.

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